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Gemini Cricket
04-29-2006, 04:30 PM
I have no delusions that I'm a saint. I'm flawed just like everybody else. Everyone knows that. Rush needs to suck it up, be a man and admit that he's no better than anyone else and that he fu cked up. But, no, it's time to play the victim. I'm sorry, it's this kind of passive aggressive stuff that people pull that bugs. Don't pick on me while I pick on others. Oy.

scaeagles
04-29-2006, 05:06 PM
I heard the shows when he talked about his upcoming leave of absense and his discussions of the five weeks at the drug treatment clinic upon his return. He most certainly did suck it up and say he screwed up. Not in terms of criminal activity - he completely denies doctor shopping - but in terms of his own personal weakness in becoming addicted to pain killers.

wendybeth
04-29-2006, 07:09 PM
While I despise Limbaugh, I think he's to be pitied. He has lost his hearing, probably due to the drug abuse, and I'm sure he's suffered more than public embarassment- we have a few addicts in our family and I know how much pain they go through. His behavior post-treatment shows he's just a weasel, though. If he gets out of this without charges it will be because of his celebrity- saying he didn't doc shop is ridiculous. Every addict doc shops, and if he's desperate enough to hit up his housekeeper and others for meds, chances are he did the same with the docs. I'd have a hell of a lot more respect for him if he owned up to what he's done, but he hasn't the cajones to do so.

Scrooge McSam
04-30-2006, 05:25 AM
- he completely denies doctor shopping -

Do tell? WOW! Knowing Rush's commitment to truth and fairness as I do, I'll just take whatever Rush says at face value.;)

Not Afraid
04-30-2006, 10:31 AM
It's too bad he feel that way about drugies and addicts since he is one himself. His self esteme and self respect must be very low. I feel sorry for him and I hope he can stay in recovery. He mght just learn something.

Nephythys
04-30-2006, 11:11 AM
well, I'll say one thing. You all never disappoint me.

wendybeth
04-30-2006, 11:28 AM
We aim to please.

Not Afraid
04-30-2006, 12:01 PM
And do it JUST for you!

scaeagles
04-30-2006, 12:21 PM
His self esteme and self respect must be very low. I feel sorry for him and I hope he can stay in recovery. He mght just learn something.

He has been in recovery programs for over 2 years now.

Nephythys
04-30-2006, 12:46 PM
I feel so special...and dirty all at the same time. ;)

wendybeth
04-30-2006, 01:09 PM
He has been in recovery programs for over 2 years now.

That's good- the trick is to realize it's a life-long commitment. I imagine his counselors have told him of the importance of taking responsibility for his addiction and owning up to past transgressions. I still don't know how he managed to go to at least four different docs and obtain over 2000 pills in a six month period of time and not fall into the 'doc shopping' category. I wonder why he didn't just fight this all the way through, if he were truly innocent. He's supposed to be such a tough guy, after all.:rolleyes:

scaeagles
04-30-2006, 01:39 PM
That's something that only he can know. Personally, I wonder how a prosecutor can devote 2 years to this and make a deal where Limbaugh, as incredibly wealthy as he is, only has to pay around a $30,000 fine to cover the cost of the investigation against him.

Cheaper than continuing to pay his lawyer, I'm sure.

Nephythys
04-30-2006, 02:01 PM
He's supposed to be such a tough guy, after all.:rolleyes:

That is your view- he has never claimed to be a tough guy at all. Harmless loveable fuzzball, but not a tough guy.

I have to say that I doubt you have spent any real time listening to him, or you are unable to listen with an open mind. You claim he spreads hate- and that is so far from the truth as to be laughable....you want right wing hate speech- find Michael Savage. Not Rush.

It's funny to see anyone rolling their eyes about something that has no bearing on the person they are talking about-because it screams that you don't actually listen or hear anything he says if that is your impression.

scaeagles
04-30-2006, 02:38 PM
I had forgotten all of this - how tough the prosecutors talked when they first started going after LImbaugh.

Source is Drudge -

Prosecutors claimed they had evidence that Limbaugh committed at least 10 felonies!

It now appears James Martz, the prosecutor who headed the investigation into Limbaugh's prescription drug use, was bluffing when he said that medical records "indicate evidence that would support in excess of 10 felony counts for violations."

Prosecutors said Limbaugh, in any deal, would have to plead guilty to doctor shopping, a third-degree felony punishable by up to five years in prison.

That's quite a jump from 10 felonies and any plea deal including 3 to 5 years prison time to basically a 30K fine.

Now....I do fully agree that Rush had always talked about drug users in a very, very negative light. Certainly he did call them "human debris" as GC quoted. I have not heard him use any such term to describe drug users since he has returned from his stint in rehab. So perhaps he did learn something.

Nephythys
04-30-2006, 02:51 PM
Now....I do fully agree that Rush had always talked about drug users in a very, very negative light. Certainly he did call them "human debris" as GC quoted. I have not heard him use any such term to describe drug users since he has returned from his stint in rehab. So perhaps he did learn something.


ditto, I heard it too-

wendybeth
04-30-2006, 04:56 PM
That is your view- he has never claimed to be a tough guy at all. Harmless loveable fuzzball, but not a tough guy.

I have to say that I doubt you have spent any real time listening to him, or you are unable to listen with an open mind. You claim he spreads hate- and that is so far from the truth as to be laughable....you want right wing hate speech- find Michael Savage. Not Rush.

It's funny to see anyone rolling their eyes about something that has no bearing on the person they are talking about-because it screams that you don't actually listen or hear anything he says if that is your impression.
Rush is a harmless fuzzball?

I'm so sorry- I was judging him based on his past speeches, radio shows and the various sound-bites I've been subjected to over the past decade or so. I must have missed the 'loveable fuzzball' show.

Do I really need to go through and post examples of his cuddliness? And is this guy worthy of any more of my time?

Nope.

Scrooge McSam
04-30-2006, 05:39 PM
So perhaps he did learn something.

That's a happy thought. Let's go with that.

Nephythys
04-30-2006, 05:41 PM
Rush is a harmless fuzzball?

I'm so sorry- I was judging him based on his past speeches, radio shows and the various sound-bites I've been subjected to over the past decade or so. I must have missed the 'loveable fuzzball' show.

Do I really need to go through and post examples of his cuddliness? And is this guy worthy of any more of my time?

Nope.


Thanks for proving my point. I now return you to your regularly scheduled mis-informed assumptions.

sleepyjeff
04-30-2006, 09:28 PM
ditto

ditto;)

Earkid
04-30-2006, 11:05 PM
While I despise Limbaugh, I think he's to be pitied. He has lost his hearing, probably due to the drug abuse, <snip>While studying for my Doctorate in Audiology I followed Rush's struggle with sudden/progressive hearing loss with intense interest. The doctor's at the House Ear Institute in Los Angeles put Rush thru many tests to determine the etiology of his loss in order to determine whether or not a cochlear implant was indicated. They determined that he lost his hearing from a systemic viral infection that attacked the unique tissues and structures of the ear as if they were a foreign body. This is how Rush went from essentially normal hearing to a profound hearing impairment within six months. I am currently the audiologist for a patient who is suffering from the same ailment and, luckily, her hearing has stabilized at about a 60% impairment.

I know I don't post here much but I just wanted to add my .02 since I do specialize in ears.

As my final comment I will say that I think many are missing the true outrage of this investigation of Rush. How many times have we heard on the news lately how people are afraid that the president is illegally wiretapping and we have no privacy, blah blah. And yet when Rush's medical records were seized illegally no one in the media expressed outrage about that invasion of privacy? Hmm, pot, kettle, black?

wendybeth
04-30-2006, 11:33 PM
When he first lost his hearing it was assumed that it was probably due to auto-immune disease, but I am unaware that any definitive proof was made that established it for a fact. Since the news of his drug abuse was released, there have been many reports linking his drug of choice to sudden hearing loss: Palm Beach Post (http://keyword.netscape.com/ns/boomframe.jsp?query=rush+limbaugh+hearing+loss&page=1&offset=2&result_url=redir%3Fsrc%3Dwebsearch%26requestId%3D3 34b3b32e450b58d%26clickedItemRank%3D3%26userQuery% 3Drush%2Blimbaugh%2Bhearing%2Bloss%26clickedItemUR N%3Dhttp%253A%252F%252Fwww.palmbeachpost.com%252Fl ocalnews%252Fcontent%252Fnews%252Flimbaugh%252F100 303_limbaugh5.html%26invocationType%3D-%26fromPage%3DnsBrowserRoll%26amp%3BampTest%3D1&remove_url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.palmbeachpost.com%2Flo calnews%2Fcontent%2Fnews%2Flimbaugh%2F100303_limba ugh5.html)
Salon (http://keyword.netscape.com/ns/boomframe.jsp?query=rush+limbaugh+hearing+loss&page=2&offset=2&result_url=redir%3Fsrc%3Dwebsearch%26requestId%3D1 d5c4a862a019af2%26clickedItemRank%3D27%26userQuery %3Drush%2Blimbaugh%2Bhearing%2Bloss%26clickedItemU RN%3Dhttp%253A%252F%252Fwww.salon.com%252Fnews%252 Ffeature%252F2003%252F10%252F07%252Frush_drugs%252 Findex.html%26invocationType%3Dnext%26fromPage%3DN SCPNextPrevB%26amp%3BampTest%3D1&remove_url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.salon.com%2Fnews%2Ffea ture%2F2003%2F10%2F07%2Frush_drugs%2Findex.html)
Rx List (http://keyword.netscape.com/ns/boomframe.jsp?query=rush+limbaugh+hearing+loss&page=5&offset=2&result_url=redir%3Fsrc%3Dwebsearch%26requestId%3D1 d5c4a862a019d6b%26clickedItemRank%3D60%26userQuery %3Drush%2Blimbaugh%2Bhearing%2Bloss%26clickedItemU RN%3Dhttp%253A%252F%252Fwww.rxlist.com%252Frxboard %252Fvicodin.pl%253Fnoframes%253Bread%253D71938%26 invocationType%3Dnext%26fromPage%3DNSCPNextPrevB%2 6amp%3BampTest%3D1&remove_url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.rxlist.com%2Frxboard%2 Fvicodin.pl%253Fnoframes%253Bread%253D71938)
TalkRadio (http://keyword.netscape.com/ns/boomframe.jsp?query=rush+limbaugh+hearing+loss&page=8&offset=2&result_url=redir%3Fsrc%3Dwebsearch%26requestId%3D1 d5c4a862a019f4b%26clickedItemRank%3D110%26userQuer y%3Drush%2Blimbaugh%2Bhearing%2Bloss%26clickedItem URN%3Dhttp%253A%252F%252Fwww.radiotalk.org%252Fnew s%252Frushaddiction.html%26invocationType%3Dnext%2 6fromPage%3DNSCPNextPrevB%26amp%3BampTest%3D1&remove_url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.radiotalk.org%2Fnews%2 Frushaddiction.html)
USA Today (http://keyword.netscape.com/ns/boomframe.jsp?query=rush+limbaugh+hearing+loss&page=8&offset=2&result_url=redir%3Fsrc%3Dwebsearch%26requestId%3D1 d5c4a862a019f4b%26clickedItemRank%3D112%26userQuer y%3Drush%2Blimbaugh%2Bhearing%2Bloss%26clickedItem URN%3Dhttp%253A%252F%252Fwww.usatoday.com%252Flife %252F2003-10-12-rush_x.htm%26invocationType%3Dnext%26fromPage%3DNS CPNextPrevB%26amp%3BampTest%3D1&remove_url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.usatoday.com%2Flife%2F 2003-10-12-rush_x.htm)
Miller Med Uni (http://keyword.netscape.com/ns/boomframe.jsp?query=rush+limbaugh+hearing+loss&page=8&offset=2&result_url=redir%3Fsrc%3Dwebsearch%26requestId%3D1 d5c4a862a019f4b%26clickedItemRank%3D114%26userQuer y%3Drush%2Blimbaugh%2Bhearing%2Bloss%26clickedItem URN%3Dhttp%253A%252F%252Fwww.med.miami.edu%252Fcom munications%252Fsom_news%252Findex.asp%253Fid%253D 127%26invocationType%3Dnext%26fromPage%3DNSCPNextP revB%26amp%3BampTest%3D1&remove_url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.med.miami.edu%2Fcommun ications%2Fsom_news%2Findex.asp%253Fid%253D127)

....and there are about a zillion more, but these cover it pretty well. No article, including the most recent in Newsweek, states that his diagnosis was definitive. My daughter lost her hearing to an infection, and it took three years to establish that was the cause, largely because no biopsies could be obtained without destroying residual hearing. (And we had excellent documentation). She is friends with several children who lost their hearing, none of which have a specific diagnosis- just the usual 'probably viral or autoimmune'.

From the Salon article:

"Three days later, doctors at House told reporters that they were treating Limbaugh for "hearing loss resulting from autoimmune inner ear disease," or AIED. The doctors said that they based their diagnosis on Limbaugh's "medical history and hearing tests." However, they noted at the time that "Mr. Limbaugh does not display most of the symptoms associated with AIED."
House physicians issued a statement late last week in which they stuck with their diagnosis of AIED, despite the surfacing of allegations that Limbaugh had abused one of the drugs House previously identified as causing hearing loss. "The AIED diagnosis has not changed, and the House Ear Clinic continues to consult Mr. Limbaugh regarding his treatment for this disorder, and to follow up with him regarding his cochlear implant," they said.
In the statement, the House doctors said that hearing loss caused by an overdose of Vicodin-type drugs "usually occurs over a period of days," while hearing loss caused by AIED typically occurs "over a period of several weeks to months." Limbaugh's hearing loss reportedly took several months, from May through September 2001.
But Dr. Gail Ishiyama, a UCLA neurotologist studying the mechanism that triggers hearing loss in Vicodin users, said that there is no real way to tell the difference between AIED and Vicodin-induced hearing loss -- unless the patient confesses to drug abuse. "It can present very similarly," she told Salon Monday, "and unless the patient tells you that they're abusing the Vicodin or other pain medication, you wouldn't know the difference."

Scrooge McSam
05-01-2006, 04:28 AM
And yet when Rush's medical records were seized illegally no one in the media expressed outrage about that invasion of privacy? Hmm, pot, kettle, black?

Mr. Limbaugh's records were siezed legally after the prosecuters followed Florida law by obtaining a search warrant and getting the approval of a judge. This only after allegations came to light of just what Mr. Limbaugh was up to. The ACLU contested that action and the whole affair was covered quite extensively in the media; so much for your "no one in the media" comment.

Surely you don't mean to equate Rush's troubles with our President's NSA records trolling adventures which are in VIOLATION of federal law and done WITHOUT judicial approval, none of which we were ever supposed to know about?

Gemini Cricket
05-01-2006, 05:28 AM
I watched a CNN special last night about AIDS and President Clinton was on. He spoke and took questions from the audience. I think he speaks very well. Very eloquent. I miss him a great deal.

People are saying his new portrait looks like Ted Koppel. Did anyone else hear this? I thought that was funny.
:D

Nephythys
05-01-2006, 05:56 AM
While studying for my Doctorate in Audiology I followed Rush's struggle with sudden/progressive hearing loss with intense interest. The doctor's at the House Ear Institute in Los Angeles put Rush thru many tests to determine the etiology of his loss in order to determine whether or not a cochlear implant was indicated. They determined that he lost his hearing from a systemic viral infection that attacked the unique tissues and structures of the ear as if they were a foreign body. This is how Rush went from essentially normal hearing to a profound hearing impairment within six months. I am currently the audiologist for a patient who is suffering from the same ailment and, luckily, her hearing has stabilized at about a 60% impairment.

I know I don't post here much but I just wanted to add my .02 since I do specialize in ears.

As my final comment I will say that I think many are missing the true outrage of this investigation of Rush. How many times have we heard on the news lately how people are afraid that the president is illegally wiretapping and we have no privacy, blah blah. And yet when Rush's medical records were seized illegally no one in the media expressed outrage about that invasion of privacy? Hmm, pot, kettle, black?

Nice try :) But privacy doesn't matter if it's a conservative. Also, you can't bring reason and reality into a situation where the mold is set, but kudos for trying.

scaeagles
05-01-2006, 06:55 AM
Hi Earkid. Hope to see more of you around here.

scaeagles
05-01-2006, 07:16 AM
Mr. Limbaugh's records were siezed legally after the prosecuters followed Florida law by obtaining a search warrant and getting the approval of a judge.

True. Does this mean you believe in the infallability of the judicial system? That the ruling was proper?

Just curious. I disagree with judicial rulings ALL the time, but we have to live with them. Just because the Supreme Court ruled that it was OK to take the private property of one private entity and give it to another private entity doesn't make it right (or even Consitutional, really).

innerSpaceman
05-01-2006, 07:18 AM
Hey, he was just refuting the allegation that the seizure was illegal.

It's ok to explore things further, but I hope you are not implying that SMcS has to then justify his refutation of an obvious falsehood that was posted by someone else.

scaeagles
05-01-2006, 07:22 AM
No - not at all. I am really just curious as to what he thinks of that particular ruling. That's why I started my response to Scrooge with "True", acknowledging that, yes, indeed, that was the ruling.

Gemini Cricket
05-01-2006, 07:22 AM
How many times have we heard on the news lately how people are afraid that the president is illegally wiretapping and we have no privacy, blah blah. And yet when Rush's medical records were seized illegally no one in the media expressed outrage about that invasion of privacy? Hmm, pot, kettle, black?
From the January 10 broadcast of The Rush Limbaugh Show:

LIMBAUGH: I mean -- [Sen. Patrick] Leahy's [D-VT] comments the -- during his -- during his -- during his -- his question period were outrageous. And [Supreme Court nominee Samuel A.] Alito was just toying with him during the whole time. Leahy said that spying on Americans without a warrant -- that's not what happened! He's misstating the facts! Americans were not spied on without a warrant.

But Limbaugh himself is saying that the wiretapping without warrants didn't happen. So following his logic, what's there to get up in arms about?

Scrooge McSam
05-01-2006, 07:33 AM
Does this mean you believe in the infallability of the judicial system?

If by infallible you mean "incapable of error or failure", then no. No system devised by man is infallible.

That the ruling was proper?

I do believe the ruling was proper. There was evidence to suggest Rush was involved in illegal activity.

scaeagles
05-01-2006, 07:47 AM
I do believe the ruling was proper. There was evidence to suggest Rush was involved in illegal activity.

Wow. That's a dangerous precedent, IMO. I can think of lots of tangents that can go down. Should a first time drug offender have his medical records searched to see if he had sought treatment in the past? If the guy has been using drugs, clearly there is justification to seek his medical records too see if he is really a first time offender or if it is just the first time he got caught. If they have the guy on drug charges, that's evidence of a crime that needs more investigation to see just how far it goes.

Nephythys
05-01-2006, 08:19 AM
I call BS- I guarantee you that should someone they approve of come under this kind of fire, and someone tries to sieze their private records they will be screaming bloody murder.

JWBear
05-01-2006, 09:00 AM
I call BS- I guarantee you that should someone they approve of come under this kind of fire, and someone tries to sieze their private records they will be screaming bloody murder.
Funny... I was just thinking that Rush is being vigorously defended by the same people who would be calling for the head of any left-wing pundant who did what he did.

scaeagles
05-01-2006, 09:08 AM
Funny... I was just thinking that Rush is being vigorously defended by the same people who would be calling for the head of any left-wing pundant who did what he did.

You may have a point....but something tells me that after a two year investigation (that included the apprehension of his medical records) that should there have been anything they could have gotten Rush on (particularly the felonies that were mentioned by the prosecutors), there would have been no plea deal basically letting him off with nothing.

However, I will say that I find it sad whenever a Charlie Sheen (not a pundit, mind you, but in the public eye) or a Whitney Houston has repeated problems and can't seem to get over them. I believe dealers should get time, but the process of putting users in prison is pointless. Fines? OK. Rehab? Certainly. Jail time? Probably not doing anyone any good.

Plus, looking at and listening to James Carville, something tells me he's on speed.:) I don't think jail time is required.

Nephythys
05-01-2006, 09:12 AM
Maybe- maybe not. Frankly I am not sure I would be calling for the head of anyone who has a drug problem due to pain. It's called sympathy and empathy- no matter the person. Especially since I don't listen to left wing commentators much- I doubt I would know enough to want to condemn them. Other people have proven that they don't need to actually know anything accurate in order to condemn Rush.

Alex
05-01-2006, 09:37 AM
I wouldn't call for anybody's head because I support the legalization of all drugs and consider anybody using them as engaged in an appopriate act of civil disobedience.

Is Limbaugh a hypocrite? Yes, but then we all are and there is nothing inconsistent in the idea of preaching against sin even if you are yourself a sinner. There is also nothing inconsistent in feeling that people should be punished to the fullest extent of the law possible and that the accused should still engage in the strongest defense available. Hypocrisy does not affect the validity of an argument.

Most of my problems with the story is with the D.A. who apparently was trying the case in the media and making claims that he had no support for (not even sufficient to bring an indictment which is a low threshhold). That is an abuse of the power of his office.

I don't have any problem with the examination of medical records because I disagree with the doctor-patient privilege and would like to see it abolished anyway.

wendybeth
05-01-2006, 10:05 AM
Maybe- maybe not. Frankly I am not sure I would be calling for the head of anyone who has a drug problem due to pain. It's called sympathy and empathy- no matter the person. Especially since I don't listen to left wing commentators much- I doubt I would know enough to want to condemn them. Other people have proven that they don't need to actually know anything accurate in order to condemn Rush.

"Compassion is no substitute for justice."
Rush Limbaugh (http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/quotes/r/rushlimbau153255.html)


I am glad to see the compassionate conservatives coming out on this subject, though.;)

Nephythys
05-01-2006, 10:13 AM
There has been justice- the problem is that most people on your side wanted him arrested, humiliated and silenced. It doesn't matter that at this point that justice has been served and is done.

Compassion and consequences are not mutually exclusive-

-and as to you tossing a Rush quote at me- given your prior comments- it means nothing, because I don't have context- and I am well aware that context matters. So you'll excuse me if I pretty much ignore it.

Gemini Cricket
05-01-2006, 10:15 AM
wendybeth, you missed a few:
“Feminism was established to allow unattractive women easier access to the mainstream.”
“The most beautiful thing about a tree is what you do with it after you cut it down”
“The difference between Los Angeles and yogurt is that yogurt comes with less fruit.”
“When a gay person turns his back on you, it is anything but an insult; it's an invitation”
“Take that bone out of your nose and call me back”
And these, I guess, are about himself...
"There's a simple way to solve the crime problem: obey the law; punish those who do not.”
“If you commit a crime, you're guilty.”

Yeah, I feel really sorry for this guy.
:D

wendybeth
05-01-2006, 10:18 AM
....-and as to you tossing a Rush quote at me- given your prior comments- it means nothing, because I don't have context- and I am well aware that context matters. So you'll excuse me if I pretty much ignore it.

'Ditto.'

wendybeth
05-01-2006, 10:23 AM
Here is the context you require- none really provided, just Rush spouting off his proclamations:


Rush: The 35 Undeniable Truths

As read by Rush Limbaugh on his radio show, Friday, February 18, 1994:

(All equally truthful: number 1 is not more or less important than 35.)

There is a distinct singular American culture - rugged individualism and self-reliance - which made America great.
The vast majority of the rich in this country did not inherit their wealth; they earned it. They are the country's achievers, producers, and job creators.
No nation has ever taxed itself into prosperity.
Evidence refutes liberalism.
There is no such thing as a New Democrat.
The Earth's eco-system is not fragile.
Character matters; leadership decends from character.
The most beautiful thing about a tree is what you do with it after you cut it down.
Ronald Reagan was the greatest president of the twentieth century.
The 1980s was not a decade of greed but a decade of prosperity; it was the longest period of peacetime growth in American history.
Abstinence prevents sexually transmitted disease and pregnancy -every time it's tried.
Condoms only work during the school year.
Poverty is not the root ("rut") cause of crime.
There's a simple way to solve the crime problem: obey the law; punish those who do not.
If you commit a crime, you are guilty.
Women should not be allowed on juries where the accused is a stud.
The way to improve our schools is not more money, but the reintroduction of moral and spiritual values, as well as the four "R's": reading, 'riting, 'rithmatic, and Rush.
I am not arrogant.
My first 35 Undeniable Truths are still undeniably true.
There is a God.
There is something wrong when critics say the problem with America is too much religion.
Morality is not defined by individual choice.
The only way liberals win national elections is by pretending they're not liberals.
Feminism was established as to allow unattractive women easier access to the mainstream of society.
Follow the money. When somebody says, "It's not the money," it's always the money.
Liberals attempt through judicial activism what they cannot win at the ballot box.
Using federal dollars as a measure, our cities have not been neglected, but poisoned with welfare dependency funds.
Progress is not striving for economic justice or fairness, but economic growth.
Liberals measure compassion by how many people are given welfare. Conservatives measure compassion by how many people no longer need it.
Compassion is no substitute for justice.
The culture war is between the winners and those who think they're losers who want to become winners. The losers think the only way they can become winners is by banding together all the losers and then empowering a leader of the losers to make things right for them.
The Los Angeles riots were not caused by the Rodney King verdict. The Los Angeles riots were caused by rioters.
You could afford your house without your government - if it weren't for your government.
Words mean things.
Too many Americans can't laugh at themselves anymore.

Earkid
05-01-2006, 10:29 AM
Well, wendybeth, my information about the nature of Rush's hearing loss comes directly from the mouth of one of the Dr.'s House. I don't need to read it in magazines when I can speak with the doctor who actually treated Mr. Limbaugh. And since you don't know me I don't expect you to take my word as law. I just wanted to add my perspective since I am closer to the story than most.

And another judge ruled:
The defense won an important round last December when a judge, basing his ruling on privacy, refused to let prosecutors take testimony from Limbaugh's doctors about his medical treatment.

scaeagles
05-01-2006, 10:30 AM
That's interesting, Earkid. So one judge rules that his medical records can be used, and another rules that medical professionals cannot testify? Hmmmm.....

wendybeth
05-01-2006, 10:45 AM
From Salon:

"When asked about the AIED diagnosis late last week, House spokeswoman Christa Spieth Nuber initially told Salon that Limbaugh underwent blood tests during his diagnosis and treatment at House, and that the tests did not reveal any signs of drug abuse. Minutes later, however, Spieth Nuber called back to say that she had discussed Limbaugh's case with Dr. Jennifer Derebery, one of the physicians who had treated Limbaugh, and that Derebery told her that Limbaugh had not, in fact, been tested for "toxicity" related to drug use. She said her earlier statement to the contrary had been an error based on her own mistaken assumption about the way Limbaugh's case would have been handled."

When my daughter lost her hearing, one of the first things they checked was whether or not she was on any ototoxic meds. Did the docs perform a Western Blot test on Rush? I haven't seen any evidence online of a sustantial workup, just the docs saying that they based the diagnoisis on his statements to them and their observations, plus the usual process of elimination- although they neglected the drug screening....:rolleyes:

Nephythys
05-01-2006, 10:59 AM
40 pills (http://www.breitbart.com/news/2006/05/01/D8HB3LC05.html)

Quick- someone get a torch.

wendybeth
05-01-2006, 11:48 AM
His scrips showed around 2000 pills prescribed over a six month period, which averages to around 11 pills a day. That's a hell of a lot of pills. Maybe he got the prescrips and gave the pills to the needy.

Nephythys
05-01-2006, 11:52 AM
And maybe there ended up being much less to it than what flitted through the dreams of liberals.

scaeagles
05-01-2006, 11:53 AM
I don't know about oxycontin - I really don't - but when I was on percocet after my surgery I was told to take 1-2 every four hours as needed for pain. If I took two every four hours, that would be 12/day.

Granted, I never took that much and did my absolute best to get off the stuff as quickly as I possibly could.

wendybeth
05-01-2006, 11:55 AM
No, the scrips are documented.

Every prescription of legend drugs, especially tightly controlled ones like that, are tracked by computer. Then, there are the drugs his housekeeper scored for him.....

He's admitted he's a drug addict- are you saying he isn't?

wendybeth
05-01-2006, 11:56 AM
I don't know about oxycontin - I really don't - but when I was on percocet after my surgery I was told to take 1-2 every four hours as needed for pain. If I took two every four hours, that would be 12/day.

Granted, I never took that much and did my absolute best to get off the stuff as quickly as I possibly could.

Your posts while on Percs were hilarious!:D

scaeagles
05-01-2006, 11:58 AM
Your posts while on Percs were hilarious!:D

Just as long as I don't have to type the word "discussing"......

Nephythys
05-01-2006, 12:01 PM
No, the scrips are documented.

Every prescription of legend drugs, especially tightly controlled ones like that, are tracked by computer. Then, there are the drugs his housekeeper scored for him.....

He's admitted he's a drug addict- are you saying he isn't?


No- I am saying that clearly there was a reason they scaled back the charges. So maybe there was less to it than thought-

wendybeth
05-01-2006, 12:06 PM
One wonders why he didn't just fight this all the way to the courts, then?

Couldn't possibly be that he made a fantastic plea-bargain? He also has to pay $30,000 do defray the costs of the investigation. It must be galling to have to do so when one is so very innocent.

Nephythys
05-01-2006, 12:08 PM
Nice way to twist it to your satisfaction. You'll see the boogey men you want to see no matter how little information you have.

wendybeth
05-01-2006, 12:10 PM
I'm just going on info that I've provided- can you back up your assertions?

Gemini Cricket
05-01-2006, 12:14 PM
The Supreme Court, reversing the federal appeals court in San Francisco, today unanimously revived the claim of 1993 "Playmate of the Year" Anna Nicole Smith for nearly $500 million of her late husband's estate.
Source (http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-050106anna_lat,0,7619703.story?coll=la-home-headlines)

Anna can sue for her millions now. Damn activist Supreme Court Justices.
:D

scaeagles
05-01-2006, 12:14 PM
Couldn't possibly be that he made a fantastic plea-bargain? He also has to pay $30,000 do defray the costs of the investigation. It must be galling to have to do so when one is so very innocent.

Or you can look at it practically, being that $30K is probably less than he paid his lawyers in a month. Of course it is a great plea bargin. Nothing on his record, and 30K to him is probably like 30 cents to me. After 2.5 years, I'd just want it to be over. It is.

wendybeth
05-01-2006, 12:21 PM
And that would be your spin on it, Scaeagles. I'm merely going by his past statements and his feisty character- it just seems that if this were such a travesty of justice, he'd be fighting it until he bumped into Anna Nicole at the SC. It really doesn't matter to me if he got off on these charges, as I think our drug laws are ridiculous, but I'm just amused by the responses being posted here and the fact that one day I'm branded a bleeding heart liberal, and the next I am lacking compassion.

scaeagles
05-01-2006, 12:23 PM
Here - try this - You "brutal no compassion selectively bleeding heart liberal".

Nephythys
05-01-2006, 12:25 PM
I'm just going on info that I've provided- can you back up your assertions?


No, you are going off of your assumptions based on your bias filtered through some articles. You have no supporting evidence for your remarks on the plea bargain- nor do I.

You weren't there- you have no idea what transpired. What have I "asserted" outside of the fact that liberals wanted him arrested tried and silenced- are you going to tell me that's not true?

Gemini Cricket
05-01-2006, 12:35 PM
Here - try this - You "brutal no compassion selectively bleeding heart liberal".
Did someone call my name?

:D

wendybeth
05-01-2006, 12:44 PM
Here - try this - You "brutal no compassion selectively bleeding heart liberal".

I'm also a part of the vast Left-Wing conspiracy to slience Mr. Limbaugh.:D

Gemini Cricket
05-01-2006, 12:47 PM
I think Rush and Ann Coulter should breed and raise acid spitting demon spawn together.

:evil:

scaeagles
05-01-2006, 12:49 PM
If I up my rhetoric will you say the I should breed with Ann? Ahhh....Ann.....

http://www.cpl.net/~carville/ann_coulter-lingerie.jpg

Gemini Cricket
05-01-2006, 12:56 PM
If I up my rhetoric will you say the I should breed with Ann? Ahhh....Ann.....
Good Lord! Someone pass me the glue for my eyelids! :D

No one deserves such a fate than to bed that! But if you must, start a thread about it after. We'll discuss.

Personally, I think you're too smart to speak with the hate rhetoric that Rush Limbaugh uses. How's that for a "sort of" compliment?
:D

scaeagles
05-01-2006, 01:01 PM
I still disagree that it is "hate" rhetoric. Is saying that someone is a worthless piece of human debris anymore spiteful than some of the things said around here about Bush?

I think we discussed once that probably hate speech comes into play when you discuss actually bringing harm to someone.

Scrooge McSam
05-01-2006, 01:29 PM
If I up my rhetoric will you say the I should breed with Ann? Ahhh....Ann.....

I'll say you should... only because of the hell that would then be visited on you by your wife ;)

Dream of Ann all you like... I'll be dreaming of Stephen Colbert and his evisceration of Bush and the entire DC Press Corps. I don't think I've ever laughed so hard in my entire laugh.

scaeagles
05-01-2006, 02:25 PM
Piece on Limbaugh and his addiction from Newsweek (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/12555181/site/newsweek/)

This does a good job, I think, of describing the whole ordeal, including the medical problems that led Limbaugh to take painkillers in the first place, and Limbaugh's words upon returning to the airwaves -

I'm not a role model. What I did, I did knowingly. What I did, I did because I wanted to do it, but I knew it was wrong the whole time.

Motorboat Cruiser
05-01-2006, 03:00 PM
Dream of Ann all you like... I'll be dreaming of Stephen Colbert and his evisceration of Bush and the entire DC Press Corps. I don't think I've ever laughed so hard in my entire laugh.

I heard clips of this today that were brilliant. Do you know of a link to either an audio or video clip, per chance?

Motorboat Cruiser
05-01-2006, 03:00 PM
scaeagles, next time you post a pic like that, please put it in a spoiler box. I'm trying to eat here.

Gemini Cricket
05-01-2006, 03:10 PM
I heard clips of this today that were brilliant. Do you know of a link to either an audio or video clip, per chance?
http://www.crooksandliars.com/2006/04/29.html#a8104

scaeagles
05-01-2006, 03:15 PM
scaeagles, next time you post a pic like that, please put it in a spoiler box. I'm trying to eat here.

The Ann Coulter Diet Plan.

Scrooge McSam
05-01-2006, 03:17 PM
I heard clips of this today that were brilliant. Do you know of a link to either an audio or video clip, per chance?

Why, sugar, I thought you'd never ask!!!

Huffpo article with complete transcript included (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/chris-durang/ignoring-colbert-part-tw_b_20130.html)

www.crooksandliars.com article with video links (http://www.crooksandliars.com/2006/04/29.html#a8104)

The crooksandliars vid is only the last half of Colbert's portion, but has most of the good stuff. There are complete vid links kicking around on kos but I'm having trouble finding those right now.

Motorboat Cruiser
05-01-2006, 03:34 PM
Thanks for the links. That was damn funny.

wendybeth
05-01-2006, 05:08 PM
That was hilarious! I loved the interaction with Scalia.:D

BarTopDancer
05-01-2006, 05:10 PM
Office politics are worse then actual politics. :(

Ghoulish Delight
05-01-2006, 05:19 PM
Complete verions of Colbert:
Part 1 (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lcIRXur61II&feature=Views&page=1&t=t&f=)
Part 2 (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HN0INDOkFuo&feature=Views&page=1&t=t&f=b)
Part 3 (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rJvar7BKwvQ&feature=Views&page=1&t=t&f=b)

And Bush's response:
Aaah! 2 Bushes!!!! (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o_VK-tg1THM&search=white%20house%20correspondents)

Gn2Dlnd
05-02-2006, 11:19 AM
Mr. Colbert is my hero.

http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=1E8ACF4A5B57CD89

Gn2Dlnd
05-02-2006, 04:59 PM
On the U.S. Department of State website...

http://usinfo.state.gov/esp/home/topics/us_society_values/national_symbols/anthem_spanish.html

Four, yes FOUR, sanctioned translations of the national anthem in Spanish. People need to get a grip.

Perhaps you would prefer, sacre bleu!, French?

http://www.amb-usa.fr/az/h/hymne.htm

scaeagles
05-04-2006, 02:41 PM
Looks like man made global warming has spread all the way to Jupiter. What else could explain it?

Global warming on Jupiter (http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/060504_red_jr.html)

sleepyjeff
05-05-2006, 07:53 AM
Of course Martian weather changes must have something to do with man too............http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/mgs/newsroom/20050920a.html

and..........http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/newsdesk/archive/releases/1997/15/

Must be all those suvs we keep landing on this very fragile world;)

Gemini Cricket
05-05-2006, 08:36 AM
Of course Martian weather changes must have something to do with man too............
Well, men are from Mars...

:D

Gemini Cricket
05-05-2006, 08:58 AM
Human rights groups have condemned the "barbaric" murder of a 14-year-old boy, who, according to witnesses, was shot on his doorstep by Iraqi police for the apparent crime of being gay.

Ahmed Khalil was shot at point-blank range after being accosted by men in police uniforms, according to his neighbours in the al-Dura area of Baghdad.

Campaign groups have warned of a surge in homophobic killings by state security services and religious militias following an anti-gay and anti-lesbian fatwa issued by Iraq's most prominent Shia leader, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani.

Source (http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/article362151.ece)

"And I think to myself... what a wonderful world..."
:(

Alex
05-05-2006, 01:53 PM
In the fight for control between John Negroponte and Porter Goss, the wrong one won.

scaeagles
05-05-2006, 02:47 PM
Unemployment is at 4.7%. The Dow is at a 6 year high, and only about 200 points away from it's all time high. The economy is growing between 3-4 percent. Job creation, though a bit weaker this past month at 138,000, has been strong over the last year.

All of this in spite of oil still at $70 barrel.

Motorboat Cruiser
05-05-2006, 03:08 PM
I'm thinking that it might just be a good idea to revoke any license currently held by a Kennedy to operate a vehicle, be it car, plane, tricycle, whatever.

scaeagles
05-05-2006, 03:13 PM
You gotta know Father Ted is just wanting to run and hide.

I do hope the rehab does this guy some good. TO be honest, though, from what I've been reading and hearing, he may not be ready for rehab. The story has changed many times and I feel because of this he isn't being very honest about what's going on. It could be the natural reaction to hide what is embarrassing to you and your family.

sleepyjeff
05-05-2006, 09:12 PM
I'm thinking that it might just be a good idea to revoke any license currently held by a Kennedy to operate a vehicle, be it car, plane, tricycle, whatever.

Don't forget skiis;)

Alex
05-05-2006, 10:10 PM
That one needs to be extended to the Bonos as well.

wendybeth
05-05-2006, 10:53 PM
Unemployment is at 4.7%. The Dow is at a 6 year high, and only about 200 points away from it's all time high. The economy is growing between 3-4 percent. Job creation, though a bit weaker this past month at 138,000, has been strong over the last year.

All of this in spite of oil still at $70 barrel.

Oh, I feel so much better now! I guess it won't be necessary after all to raise my rates at work due to the across the board increases in op costs.

Several of my clients operate trucking firms. Look for major disruptions in deliveries, and huge increases in shipping fees as well, within the next week or so. One of them is pretty convinced he'll go under on this one- they barely survived the last gas spike. It's a nationwide crisis, and one that is not being reported on. If prices are still as high during harvest time, which ranges from early summer to late fall, agriculture is going to take a huge hit as well. Between the labor difficulties and operating costs, the farmers up here are hurting.

sleepyjeff
05-05-2006, 11:44 PM
Look for major disruptions in deliveries, and huge increases in shipping fees as well, within the next week or so. .... It's a nationwide crisis, and one that is not being reported on. If prices are still as high during harvest time, which ranges from early summer to late fall, agriculture is going to take a huge hit as well. Between the labor difficulties and operating costs, the farmers up here are hurting.

They are hurting everywhere.....especially in places where George Bush has no influence--- http://www.autoblog.com/2006/05/01/high-gas-prices-crippling-european-growth/

scaeagles
05-06-2006, 06:37 AM
It's a nationwide crisis, and one that is not being reported on.

??????????????????????????

I can't turn on the news without hearing stories about delivery rates are increasing or how truckers are barely breaking even or any number of other stories. Not being reported on? Hardly.

Yet the one thing we could have been doing for decades to allieviate this problem - increasing our own oil production - isn't permitted.

The fact of the matter is that the economy is doing well - incredibly well. This does not mean everyone within the economy is doing well. It has never worked that way.

Ghoulish Delight
05-06-2006, 09:02 AM
Our economy is floating on a bs money. Outrageous debt from interest-only mortgages. The US is the only industrialized nation to have a negative savings rate (i.e., as a country we spend more than we earn). The average credit card debt is over $8000, and the percentage of that credit card debt that is food and other basic necessities is on the rise. And people like me, who actually save money and carry no debt, are punished by this economy. It's a recipe for disaster.

innerSpaceman
05-06-2006, 09:48 AM
Yay, people like me who have no savings and owe tens of thousands are riding on the backs of the fools who won't particpate in our bs economy!!


Eh, the exchange of "money" is all an illusory practice anyway.

Gemini Cricket
05-06-2006, 09:54 AM
There's a big scandal going on right now in Boston over the Big Dig. Apparently, someone supplied the project with low-grade, poor quality cement/concrete. So the safety of the tunnels that were made under the Charles River is in question now. There are fines and charges being thrown about. Yaddah yaddah...

I was thinking about this, though. It seems to me that there are lots of people in high places (MA govt, CA govt, FEMA, Bush Admin) who are making big decisions about vital things and seem not to be qualified at all to do their job. Who hired these idiots for the Big Dig? The freakin thing leaks and is made with shoddy material. Sheesh!

Gemini Cricket
05-06-2006, 10:01 AM
no savings
I'm horrible with money and I'm about to give advice about it. Hold on to your hats, people.

Everytime I get a tax refund it goes automatically to savings and I don't use it unless an emergency arises. Often, I'll overpay my taxes by 20 bucks or so each month to insure a refund. Then when it goes in, Ralphie and I aren't allowed to touch it. If we must, we do... but we have to replace it over the course of a couple of paychecks.

Also, we do a sweep every month. At the end of the month, we see how much is left in checking. Even if it's a few bucks, we sweep it into the Savings of No Return. Then we live off of the paychecks for that month. Whatever is left at the end of the next month gets swept.

I also have a savings account in Hawai'i still. I can automatically send deposits to it over the internet. To get it out is quite an ordeal. They can only withdraw it for me with a cashier's check that takes a couple days to process and a week to be mailed to me. The ordeal deters me from using it. So, I send money there often. (I'm saving up for a DL trip and a large freshwater aquarium.)
:)

My 2 cents...

€uroMeinke
05-06-2006, 10:22 AM
Yay, people like me who have no savings and owe tens of thousands are riding on the backs of the fools who won't particpate in our bs economy!!


Eh, the exchange of "money" is all an illusory practice anyway.

Right On Brother! Money only has value when it is spent
:cheers:

Ghoulish Delight
05-06-2006, 11:03 AM
Right On Brother! Money only has value when it is spent
:cheers: That's easy to say for someone who already owns a house. But unspent money has very real value to me when how much I have in the bank is the difference between owning a home and continuing to live in an apartment.

And for the record, I'm fine with the economic "punishment" I take. I've waited a little longer to own than I'd like, and I forgo the occasional luxury. But that's because I prefer the long term benefits over the short term gratification. I'm not saying that a less long-term monetary plan is "wrong" for an individual, I just think that having an economy that rewards high debt and no savings, making it the majority strategy by far, is an economy that's destined to crash.

scaeagles
05-06-2006, 11:34 AM
There's a big scandal going on right now in Boston over the Big Dig.

Wasn't that supposed to be done about 15 years ago????

scaeagles
05-06-2006, 11:44 AM
That's easy to say for someone who already owns a house. But unspent money has very real value to me when how much I have in the bank is the difference between owning a home and continuing to live in an apartment.

There's give and take in everything, though. I am certain you could afford a home right now on the outskirts of Phoenix. I am also certain that you are unwilling to move - due to job, attachments, whatever - in order to purchase a home in Phoenix.

So your home purchasing money is devalued by where you wish to purchase.

scaeagles
05-06-2006, 11:46 AM
Often, I'll overpay my taxes by 20 bucks or so each month to insure a refund. Then when it goes in, Ralphie and I aren't allowed to touch it. If we must, we do... but we have to replace it over the course of a couple of paychecks.

Why give the government a free loan? If you are disciplined enough to replace the money you have taken out of your savings, surely you are discplined enough to put the money in that you would get later for a refund.

Gemini Cricket
05-06-2006, 11:49 AM
Why give the government a free loan? If you are disciplined enough to replace the money you have taken out of your savings, surely you are discplined enough to put the money in that you would get later for a refund.
Oh ho! If I see money, I spend it. Poof, gone. I have little discipline in that regard.
:D

Gemini Cricket
05-06-2006, 11:50 AM
Wasn't that supposed to be done about 15 years ago????
It's done, it took way too long and now all this garbage is floating to the surface about the way it was handled.
Bleh.

scaeagles
05-06-2006, 11:52 AM
Outrageous debt from interest-only mortgages.

I look at interest only mortgages a bit differently. I do not have an interest only, but not a lot of what I pay monthly goes to principle.

If you live in a market with appreciating real estate values, it makes much more sense to have an interest only mortgage than to rent. Your real estate investment continues to grow regardless of whether you are paying down the principle, and you have massive tax benefits.

scaeagles
05-06-2006, 11:53 AM
Oh ho! If I see money, I spend it. Poof, gone. I have little discipline in that regard.
:D

Hang on....you said you are disciplined enough to use your paycheck to replace whatever you have taken out of savings. What's the difference between that and putting the $20 in that you would have otherwise had withheld in taxes?

Gemini Cricket
05-06-2006, 12:24 PM
Hang on....you said you are disciplined enough to use your paycheck to replace whatever you have taken out of savings. What's the difference between that and putting the $20 in that you would have otherwise had withheld in taxes?
That's a good question, but it makes more sense to me doing it this way. I like seeing the $20 add up at the end of the year to one big amount that I can deposit. I know, it makes little sense, but I did confess to being really bad with money.
:)

BarTopDancer
05-06-2006, 12:28 PM
I look at interest only mortgages a bit differently. I do not have an interest only, but not a lot of what I pay monthly goes to principle.

If you live in a market with appreciating real estate values, it makes much more sense to have an interest only mortgage than to rent. Your real estate investment continues to grow regardless of whether you are paying down the principle, and you have massive tax benefits.

A big problem (at least here) is the people who took out interest only loans they could barely afford. Now the interest rates are going up and people are behind on their mortgages. Yes, it was their fault for buying a home they could barely afford but the untraditional methods banks are using to get people into homes are messing with the economey as well.

BarTopDancer
05-06-2006, 12:31 PM
That's a good question, but it makes more sense to me doing it this way. I like seeing the $20 add up at the end of the year to one big amount that I can deposit. I know, it makes little sense, but I did confess to being really bad with money.:)

People bad with finances unite!

I recommend two books. If anything they aren't boring reads. You may learn something. I learned a lot, but I have yet to apply it.

Young, Fabulous and Broke by Suze Ormand (http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1573222976/sr=8-1/qid=1146943823/ref=pd_bbs_1/102-4376047-6715345?%5Fencoding=UTF8)
and
The Complete Idiots Guide to Personal Finance in your 20s and 30s (http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1592573320/qid=1146943871/sr=2-1/ref=pd_bbs_b_2_1/102-4376047-6715345?s=books&v=glance&n=283155)

Two different theories but good books.

Gemini Cricket
05-06-2006, 12:32 PM
Sometimes I'm glad I rent. But sometimes I'll watch a home fix it show and wish we could have a place of our own to do stuff like that...

Gemini Cricket
05-06-2006, 12:33 PM
Young, Fabulous and Broke by Suze Ormand (http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1573222976/sr=8-1/qid=1146943823/ref=pd_bbs_1/102-4376047-6715345?%5Fencoding=UTF8)

Hey, I'm all three of those! :D

Thanks, BTD.

Not Afraid
05-06-2006, 12:40 PM
Sometimes I'm glad I rent. But sometimes I'll watch a home fix it show and wish we could have a place of our own to do stuff like that...

You can come over and fix ours. ;)

I need a handyman, baby!:D

€uroMeinke
05-06-2006, 12:41 PM
Sometimes its a matter of scope - if you owe 10,000 and can't pay - you're in trouble. If you owe a million and can't pay - the bank is in trouble.

Gemini Cricket
05-06-2006, 12:49 PM
You can come over and fix ours. ;)

I need a handyman, baby!:D
Let's say we both watch some hunk do it? Lawn chairs, fans, hats, sunglasses and sparkling water? How about it, NA?
:D

BarTopDancer
05-06-2006, 12:50 PM
Hey, I'm all three of those! :D

Thanks, BTD.


;) Anytime.

Not Afraid
05-06-2006, 12:50 PM
Let's say we both watch some hunk do it? Lawn chairs, fans, hats, sunglasses and sparkling water? How about it, NA?
:D

I'm so THERE!

Or, rather, YOU'RE so HERE!

scaeagles
05-06-2006, 04:21 PM
A big problem (at least here) is the people who took out interest only loans they could barely afford. Now the interest rates are going up and people are behind on their mortgages. Yes, it was their fault for buying a home they could barely afford but the untraditional methods banks are using to get people into homes are messing with the economey as well.

Shows you what I know - I didn't realize that interest only loans were adjustable, not fixed.

I also fault the banks, though. They shouldn't give an adjustable rate mortgage to people who can't handle the variances in rates. That's just poor business practice.

Gemini Cricket
05-09-2006, 08:01 AM
Condoleeza is going to speak at the upcoming graduation ceremony at Boston College. The Jesuit priests at the college are not happy about it. The Catholic Church is officially anti-war. There are protests planned.

http://www.bc.edu/bc_org/rvp/pubaf/06/rice.html

€uroMeinke
05-09-2006, 08:15 PM
I kinda like Condoleeza - she's got moxie

scaeagles
05-09-2006, 08:24 PM
Why is it that colleges and/or university populations, at supposed bastions of education where the exchange of differing thought and ideas must take place, find the need to protest speakers like a Condi or a Michael Moore or an Ann Coulter or whomever? Does political disagreement mean someone is unworthy to present their ideas when invited to do so?

€uroMeinke
05-09-2006, 09:08 PM
Why is it that colleges and/or university populations, at supposed bastions of education where the exchange of differing thought and ideas must take place, find the need to protest speakers like a Condi or a Michael Moore or an Ann Coulter or whomever? Does political disagreement mean someone is unworthy to present their ideas when invited to do so?

This really is a pet peeve of mine - if the message is so bad let it fall flat on it's own accord - protesting speach means you are incapable of countering it through means outside suppression.

Motorboat Cruiser
05-09-2006, 09:51 PM
Why is it that colleges and/or university populations, at supposed bastions of education where the exchange of differing thought and ideas must take place, find the need to protest speakers like a Condi or a Michael Moore or an Ann Coulter or whomever? Does political disagreement mean someone is unworthy to present their ideas when invited to do so?

I agree.

innerSpaceman
05-09-2006, 10:05 PM
Um, no .... protesting a speaker is a way of offering the alternate point of view. It's a dialogue. It's extremely rare that a protest is going to prevent the speech, or even attempt to do so. Rather it is way for throngs of people to potentially muster enough bully pulpit that a famous (or infamous) speaker has au naturale.

If Condi is speaking, I find it behooves those who are anti-imperialist-war-machine to ride the media popularity and present an opposing viewpoint to the public. No one is being squelched, but neither is a monologue allowed to go unchallenged.

€uroMeinke
05-09-2006, 10:29 PM
Speech is best answered with speech - monologue with dialogue - shouting down speakers is censorpship. You cannot respond intelligently to something you refuse to listen too - that is my obejction to these sorts of portests - there are censorship by the masses.

lizziebith
05-09-2006, 10:40 PM
While I agree in theory with Euro...where is the forum for a person like me to GET that dialogue with a person like Condi other than on the streets? She and her ilk are completely shielded from actual dialogue with normal Americans. We shout to gain a whisper in the modern world.

innerSpaceman
05-09-2006, 10:45 PM
Who said anything about shouting her down? I'm not approving heckling. Protesting is different.



(And double plus ditto on what lizziebith said)

€uroMeinke
05-09-2006, 10:46 PM
You have the internet, you have this message board, the ability to express your opinions is unprecidented. I think the characterization that these speakers occure in a vacuum is a rather inaccurate notion in todays commnication revolution. Perhaps you get no one on one dialogue, but it's not like your message cannot be heard.

€uroMeinke
05-09-2006, 10:48 PM
Who said anything about shouting her down? I'm not approving heckling. Protesting is different.



(And double plus ditto on what lizziebeth said)

The I appologize for jumping to the conclusion - but I find most "protests" of late have been more heckling than anything else which does nothing to advance the cause.

innerSpaceman
05-09-2006, 11:14 PM
You have the internet, you have this message board, the ability to express your opinions is unprecidented.
But express them to whom? I happen to prefer expressing them here, but not if I want to have an effect on the world.

I'm told that if I want Disney to hear my complaints about the new Haunted Mansion bride, I'd best post them on micechat. Well, I'd rather be dunked in skunk ... but I'd have to change my communicating mode if I want to change Disneyland ... and even moreso if I want to change the world. My rantings on message boards won't quite cut it.

3 seconds of airtime on ABC of a 50,000 person march will get me more change-the-worldness than every post I've ever made on every message board I've ever posted on. The best use of the internet to foster change-the-world communication is enabling people to arrange a mass in-person protest with ease.

sleepyjeff
05-10-2006, 12:01 AM
. My rantings on message boards won't quite cut it.



Don't sell short your rantings.....seriously.

Gemini Cricket
05-10-2006, 06:03 AM
I know someone who is graduating and is going to be at that ceremony. He's Catholic and feels that his views of anti-war (that are Pope blessed) gives him the right to protest at his Jesuit Catholic school. More power to him. Contributing factors to this is that no one asked the students who they wanted at their own commencement and that Bono was initially supposed to be booked for the speech but prior committments took him out of the running.

Despite that, students are not allowed signs, shirts or any kind of visible words of protest to be displayed anywhere. (Even words on the top of their caps are not allowed.) Talk about not being able to present another point of view...

I disagree with Euromeinke. Moxie is defined as skill and 'know how'. Rice was our National Security Advisor when we were attacked. Her 'historical document' comment is legendary. She pushed for the failed war in Iraq. I have never trusted her abilities and have been proven right time and time again with her buffoonery and participation in the worst administration of our country's history.

My advice to the student, who asked me about what to do at his commencement as a protest, was to turn his back on Rice. It's not a boo, it's not heckling, it's not a written protest sign, but it is a definite statement. I don't know if they'll do it. But I feel they should plan something and have every right to do so.

There are two degrees of separation between Rice and myself. She's an idiot.

scaeagles
05-10-2006, 06:17 AM
I find it interesting that in a world where tolerance and openness to ideas is supposed to be a sign of enlightenment that people are unwilling to listen to those who think differently.

GC, we share differing opinions. Would you turn your back on me should I be speaking because of that?

Let's say (purely hypothetically, of course) that BC invited an openly homosexual speaker. As the position of the Catholic Church is not a pro homossexual position, would you find it acceptable or offensive for students to turn their backs?

Gemini Cricket
05-10-2006, 06:37 AM
I find it interesting that in a world where tolerance and openness to ideas is supposed to be a sign of enlightenment that people are unwilling to listen to those who think differently.
That seems to be something that's learned isn't it? I mean, this is one of the most secretive and stealthy administrations in US history. I'm sure they can recognize their own tactics of not paying attention...
GC, we share differing opinions. Would you turn your back on me should I be speaking because of that?
It would depend upon what you were speaking about.
Let's say (purely hypothetically, of course) that BC invited an openly homosexual speaker. As the position of the Catholic Church is not a pro homossexual position, would you find it acceptable or offensive for students to turn their backs?

Yes. If that's what they believed. I don't agree, but I understand it.

I have come to learn that there are grey areas in the CC. Not everyone agrees on everything. I'd cling to hoping that not everyone in the CC agrees with the CC on homosexuality and marriage equality. Our intern, for example, is Catholic and is pro-marriage equality. So is my dad. Good for them! :)

ie. I don't know where I stand as far as this immigration fight goes. But as I posted somewhere else here, it is nice to see people expressing themselves. I saw the Boston Common protests live. I didn't agree with everyone, but I would fight for their right to speak out as they were.

scaeagles
05-10-2006, 06:52 AM
Alright. That's cool. While I wouldn't go out of my way to listen to someone speak that I disagree with, should I find myself at an event where the person speaking was someone with opinions I am completely opposed to, I would be polite and listen.

In terms of expressing that they don't want someone to speak, I can see where that's not a problem. But the right to express themselves certainly ends when they enter the venue in which the speaker will be speaking, as now the house rules apply or they can be expelled.

scaeagles
05-10-2006, 07:22 AM
Politics makes for strange bedfellows....Rupert Murdoch is hosting a fundraiser for Hillary Clinton.

Gemini Cricket
05-10-2006, 07:27 AM
Politics makes for strange bedfellows....Rupert Murdoch is hosting a fundraiser for Hillary Clinton.
That seems so odd to me. I'm wondering who is becoming more like who?
:D

Alex
05-10-2006, 10:04 AM
Congress has been moved to Lake Wobegon.

I was browsing through the details (http://www.nytimes.com/packages/pdf/politics/20060509_POLL_RESULTS.pdf) of the latest NYT/CBS poll that is all over the news and found this:

Do you approve or disapprove of the way Congress is handling its job? 23% approve

How about the Representative in Congress from your district? Do you approve or disapprove of the way your Representative is handling his or her job? 53% approve.

In Lake Wobegon all of the Congressman are above average. Not that this is new, according to the historical numbers in June 1978 the same two numbers were 30% and 60%. It also shows that no matter how much people are unhappy with the president they are pretty much equally or more unhappy with Congress (in 30 years the approval rating for Congress has rarely tipped over 50%).

Question #13 is also interesting ("Do you think the economy is getting better, getting worse, or staying about the same?") in that it shows that public opinion of how the economy is doing doesn't correlate very well with what the economy is actually doing.

Question #33 also reinforces that the general public isn't necessarily the smartest group of people. 63% think the president can do a lot to control the price of gas. Though it does shed a light on a political problem when you are held responsible for something over which you have little control.

The historical numbers on party approval are interesting since it shows that the party out of power in congress tends to have higher approval numbers (the grass is always greener).

In the "Sometimes we lie to the pollster" category there is Question 54 in which 63% say they are driving less because of high gas prices. This doesn't conform at all the fact that demand for gasoline has not dropped and other polls indicate that driving plans for this summer are up slightly over last year.

sleepyjeff
05-10-2006, 10:10 AM
Very interesting info there Alex.

Gemini Cricket
05-10-2006, 10:12 AM
The problem I have is that even if there is a huge shift of power to the Dems, I feel like we'll be having the same story in the media about corruption in about 6 or 7 years from now. Only this time the color will be blue instead of red.
:shurg:

sleepyjeff
05-10-2006, 10:18 AM
If you're looking for an end to political corruption you may have a very long wait........it has been around since before the cave man.

scaeagles
05-10-2006, 10:21 AM
The general public is stupid. I really mean that. Uninformed, under educated.

I don't mean that about anyone here. I don't regard anyone here as stupid.

This is why I pay little attention to polls. I don't care what the general public thinks, to be frank. Most of that general public can't find Mississippi on a map (according to a recent study.....the reaction to the study was "we need a special program to deal with this lack of knowledge". Seriously. How about school to deal with this lack of knowledge? Anyway, I digress....).

The "gas price" question doesn't surprise me in the least, because our society has been led by politicians to believe (sadly, my republican party is now counted among those) that government is there to solve all of our problems. Gas prices too high? The President should be able to fix it!

Bleh.

Gemini Cricket
05-10-2006, 10:35 AM
If you're looking for an end to political corruption you may have a very long wait........it has been around since before the cave man.
You're right. But what's the use of rooting for either party then?

Alex
05-10-2006, 10:38 AM
The recognition that most of them aren't corrupt, even if it is simply the case that the party in power will have more corruption simply because those inclined to be corrupt can offer more bang for the buck.

BarTopDancer
05-10-2006, 10:52 AM
Congress has been moved to Lake Wobegon.

Isn't Lake Wobegon where Garfield met the panther in Garfield in the Rough?

Gemini Cricket
05-10-2006, 10:53 AM
The World Trade Center Memorial Foundation, which is charged with raising money for building and operating the memorial, says it will cost $672 million. Improvements to the infrastructure, including reinforcing the slurry wall that borders the pit at Ground Zero, add $300 million. Total tab: $972 million.
Source (http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2006-05-09-wtc-billion-cost_x.htm)

Holy crap! Almost a billion dollars?! Isn't that a lot? Who the hell's building this thing? Halliburton?
:D

BarTopDancer
05-10-2006, 10:53 AM
My co-worker sent this to me and I've spent a bit of time trying to de-bunk it to no avail. So it's either true or my searching skills suck.

It appears that the Immigration March, 2006 in Los Angeles was a success! According to data from the Los Angeles County Sheriff, Los Angeles had a reduction in the following:

82% reduction - auto theft
28% " " - murders/ violent crimes/ rapes 73% " " - vandalism / tagging 54% " " - drug related offenses (not including the area surrendering the
march)
31% " " - domestic violence cases
64% " " - misdeameanor cases (shop lifting, etc)

CHP reported that today was a record low in the least amount of traffic accidents on South CA freeways.

Looks like the immigration rally was well worth it. Maybe we can do this one again sometime. Sure saves the State of California a chunk of money.

JWBear
05-10-2006, 04:47 PM
My co-worker sent this to me and I've spent a bit of time trying to de-bunk it to no avail. So it's either true or my searching skills suck.

It sounds like a spurious attempt at racist humor to me.

Alex
05-10-2006, 05:00 PM
Why is it racist? It strikes me as nationalist.

JWBear
05-10-2006, 05:08 PM
And as a follow-up...

I just called the LA County Sheriff's Dept, and spoke to a public relations person. She assured me that no such information has been released in any form by the department. All statistical information on crime in the department's jurisdiction is released on a yearly basis.

JWBear
05-10-2006, 05:11 PM
Why is it racist? It strikes me as nationalist.
Because of the implication that Hispanic = criminal. That is racist.

Alex
05-10-2006, 05:16 PM
The numbers are relatively easy to debunk as obviously silly. Somehow I doubt the LA County Sherrif keeps detailed stats on the day in which tagging occurs. I seriously doubt they have details tagging statistics at all.

Also the murder number is assinine on its face. You can't really measure that on a day by day basis. In 2005 LA County had 433 murders. Which works out to 1.19 murders per day. A 28% reduction would mean that 0.85 people were murdered on that day.

The only place on the intenret I can find this posted is on an NRO message board where it was posted and labeled an urban legend.

Alex
05-10-2006, 05:22 PM
Except that is not necessarily the implication (and Hispanic is also not a race). There are many non-racist bases on which that data model would manifest itself. Why assume a racist one (especially a racist one that makes no mention of race).

BarTopDancer
05-10-2006, 07:20 PM
Thanks Alex. I'd love to send back URBAN LEGEND to the person who sent it to me. This guy is *righter* than Nephy and Sca (not insulting either of you, just trying to describe him). Sometimes I'd like to send him here and watch him start debating Alex and iSm. That would be fun.

JWBear
05-10-2006, 07:48 PM
Except that is not necessarily the implication (and Hispanic is also not a race). There are many non-racist bases on which that data model would manifest itself. Why assume a racist one (especially a racist one that makes no mention of race).
The implication is obvious. Who were the majority of the protesters? Hispanics. It implies that crime was down because a lot of Hispanics were too busy protesting to be out committing crimes. Ergo, that Hispanics are criminals.

innerSpaceman
05-10-2006, 08:28 PM
And since when has immigration ever been so much a nationalist thing as opposed to a racist thing? I guess it's hard to separate the two, but look at all the passionate, violent bouts of immigration resistance and take a look at the races involved.



Oh sure, Alex is going to come in with some petty fact about Irish not being a "race," nor is Italian. Pfhh, tell it to the Marines.

scaeagles
05-10-2006, 09:33 PM
I am opposed to illegal immigration but it has nothing to do with race. It just so happens that the illegals coming in are largely hispanic because of our borders. Granted, this may not have always been the case, but being anti-illegal immigration does not make one a racist.

lizziebith
05-10-2006, 10:18 PM
Granted, this may not have always been the case, but being anti-illegal immigration does not make one a racist.

But it certainly makes for a convenient modern cover for same. Don't think we haven't noticed the hiding behind the term "illegal." This is one of the things that has bothered me the most in the modern debate. Frame something ugly in an innocuous term and you've got the argument skewed. The right has been scarily good at this for some time and I find it profoundly disturbing.

BarTopDancer
05-10-2006, 10:34 PM
If thousands of people from Canada were here illegally that would make them illegal Canadians.

People from Mexico are Mexican and people from Canada are Canadian and people from America are American.

Am I being racist against the Canadians for not wanting them here illegally?

What about all the Mexicans who are here legally and want the illegal Mexicans to be kicked out? Are they racist?

wendybeth
05-10-2006, 10:49 PM
In all honesty, Lizziebith- we have a very small hispanic population up here, so I really don't equate illegal aliens with hispanics. To me, the term illegal says it all, and I really don't think I apply any sort of racial agenda to it. Damn it, if a person is not here legally, then they are illegal-plain and simple. If the laws are unfair or skewed to a certain demographic, then let's work to fix it- I'm definitely on board for that. Until then, we either declare a free-for-all run across the boarders to attain citizenship, or we actually start enforcing our laws. Otherwise, wtf have them to begin with?

lizziebith
05-10-2006, 10:53 PM
Okay...are *illegal* Canadians the problem being talked about? I don't think any honest person would say so. I think the term "illegal" is code. Code for a group that is currently being scapegoated: Mexicans.

EDIT: wendybeth's post alarms me most: they have won the terminology war and now have everyone paranoid about a person's "status." Consider me freaked.

BarTopDancer
05-10-2006, 10:53 PM
If the laws are unfair or skewed to a certain demographic

Isn't the complaint that the laws are unfair to the people who are here illegally?

wendybeth
05-10-2006, 10:55 PM
If the laws are unfair, then convince the citizenry to change them- don't frikken try to blackmail them into it, because that will never work. Echoes of the Third Estate, and we all know what they did.

Alex
05-10-2006, 11:22 PM
Irish isn't a race. Calling anti-Irish sentiment racism does a real disservice to actual racism. But since use of English words to mean specific things has been specifically precluded by iSm, I guess I haven't a leg to stand on.

The two populations of illegal immigrants I have had the most direct exposure to are Southeast Asians and the not insignifant illegal Irish population in San Francisco. I'm just as opposed to them as I am other illegal immigrants. And yet I have no problem with every member of the Hispanic, Irish, or Laotian "races" coming here legally. I'm guessing I support a more liberal legal immigration process than just about anybody that might post here. But it is good to know that since the majority of America's illegal immigrants are of the Hispanic "race" then such opposition is racist. I'm also opposed to illegal immigration in France where it is mostly Angolans and Turks. I'm opposed to it Germany where a significant portion is white Eastern Europeans. I'm opposed to it in South Korea where it is Malay, Thai, and Indonesian. I'm opposed to it when it is Canadians (and yes, there are lots of Canadians illegally in this country). I'm opposed to it when it is Americans in Canada (and yes, there are a fair amount of those as well). I'm opposed to it when it is Nicaraguans into Mexico and Haitians into the Dominican Republic. I'm just the most racisist person in the world.

To correlate crime with illegal immigration is a mostly baseless assumption (except insofar as certain crimes correlate well with the segment of the socioeconomic class in which most illegal immigrants find themselves) but it is not an inherently racist one.

Prudence
05-10-2006, 11:38 PM
EDIT: wendybeth's post alarms me most: they have won the terminology war and now have everyone paranoid about a person's "status." Consider me freaked.

I suppose there are some people who are using illegal as code. I'm sure there are some people out there that think that way. If that's the sentiment in your community, it is unfortunate. But please don't assume that we are all living that same experience.

Up here, "illegal" is just as likely to mean Chinese as Mexican, if not more so. There are regular news reports of illegal Chinese immigrants coming in through the Ports of Seattle and Tacoma in shipping containers. Or, smugglers take them over the Canadian border, just as happens with the Mexican border. I don't think I've ever heard a local news report about rounding up illegal Mexican immigrants, and I've heard dozens upon dozens about Chinese immigrants.

Maybe the bias is more pronounced on the east side of the state (wendybeth? any comment?) but honestly I wasn't aware that Hispanics were considered a minority until I started having to fill out affirmative action forms when applying for work after college graduation. Maybe I'm horribly naive, but where I lived growing up, I didn't notice the kind of bias you describe. Whenever we talked about minorities we meant African Americans exclusively, because they were the rarity.

scaeagles
05-11-2006, 05:38 AM
Frame something ugly in an innocuous term and you've got the argument skewed. The right has been scarily good at this for some time and I find it profoundly disturbing.

Ugyl and innocuous? How about descriptive? They are here....illegally.

This may be the most offensive thing I have ever read on this board, lizziebith. You think this is a right vs. left thing?:rolleyes:

scaeagles
05-11-2006, 06:02 AM
Okay...are *illegal* Canadians the problem being talked about? I don't think any honest person would say so. I think the term "illegal" is code. Code for a group that is currently being scapegoated: Mexicans.

EDIT: wendybeth's post alarms me most: they have won the terminology war and now have everyone paranoid about a person's "status." Consider me freaked.

I don't suppose there are 11 million illegal Canadians in the country. The problem is the flow through the southern border.

Who is they? "They have won the terminology war...." Let me guess what you mean....right wing racists. Open your eyes LB....it isn't just the right side of the political spectrum!

Gemini Cricket
05-11-2006, 06:12 AM
I think if they gov't is going to use the whole 'protecting our borders' mantra, that they should focus on both borders. Sometimes it feels like their focus is saying, 'protecting our country from brown people'. I mean, how many Latinos do you see sitting on the Mexican border in their Texas-shaped lawnchairs trying to protect our border? None.
;)



(oooh... I'm post 666. :D )

Scrooge McSam
05-11-2006, 06:24 AM
The problem is the flow through the southern border.

That's the result, IMHO.

The problem is not enforcing the laws we already have.

SacTown Chronic
05-11-2006, 06:31 AM
Irish isn't a race.Don't make me get drunk and kick your ass.

scaeagles
05-11-2006, 06:34 AM
That's the result, IMHO.

The problem is not enforcing the laws we already have.

I was meaning that there aren't 500,000 Canadians entering the US illegally every year. It makes more sense to focus on where the problem of a massive flow of people coming across is.

I think it is too tough to define exactly what the problem is. It is many things. Not enforcing laws, catch and release, complete lack of control of the border.....but the biggest problem is the immensely corrupt Mexican government.

Scrooge McSam
05-11-2006, 06:37 AM
I think it is too tough to define exactly what the problem is. It is many things. Not enforcing laws, catch and release, complete lack of control of the border.....but the biggest problem is the immensely corrupt Mexican government.

Don't think I don't hear you. I do.

I'm just restricting my comment to things we can actually control, if we choose to.

Gemini Cricket
05-11-2006, 06:58 AM
Pope Benedict XVI denounced gay and civil unions, saying marriage between people of the same sex is "weak.''

"Only the foundation of complete and irrevocable love between man and woman is capable of forming the basis of a society that becomes the home of all men,'' Benedict told a convention of the John Paul II Pontifical Institute today. The pope said "confusing marriage with other types of weak love'' should be avoided.

Source (http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000087&sid=awia81URdshw&refer=top_world_news)
Not surprising. :rolleyes:

He should be nicer to people. I mean, nice people go to heaven, right? Tick tock, tick tock... :D

wendybeth
05-11-2006, 08:34 AM
Prudence, while there are a small amount of hispanics* who work in the orchards and farms over here in Eastern Washington, I would have to say if any bias exists it would be against the russian immigrants. (Which I don't happen to agree with).

Lizzibith, I am not sure I follow what your edit means....do you think I am racist, or I am being manipulated by 'the other side'? I'm not turning into a pod person, am I?:eek:


*Illegals; I'm not sure how many people of hispanic descent there are who are here legally, but I think the population isn't very large compared to the southern US.

Alex
05-11-2006, 08:43 AM
Don't make me get drunk and kick your ass.

You can kick my ass all the way to Dublin (wait, I'm already there), but Irish still won't be a race.


I think all points of entry should be firmly enforced but it sounds like some people here are saying that the firement shouldn't put out any of the fire unless they can simultaneously put out the entire fire.

Border control isn't even the only issue. Many illegal immigrants enter the country legally, they just stay in the country illegally. There are an estimated 60,000-75,000 Irish in the country Illegally (mostly in the New York City area, Chicago, and San Francisco) and most of them enter the country on valid tourist visas and just don't leave when they're supposed to.

I know it is racist, but I think they should be deported when found. I also think quotas on legal immigration should be removed so that anybody who can show self-support once they get here can come legally (regardless of their "race").

Nephythys
05-11-2006, 08:49 AM
I do not see how it's racist to expect our laws to be upheld. I don't care where you come from- hispanic, blonde european.....here illegally? You should be deported.

Prudence
05-11-2006, 08:53 AM
Lots of Russian immigrants over there? I did not know that. There was a small cluster around where I used to live in Kent, but I didn't notice any bias. Maybe I was just too busy patronizing the "european deli" and buying all of their chocolate bars. I can't remember which brand, but one of those bars was the best chocolate bar I've eaten in my life, and I've sampled plenty.

SacTown Chronic
05-11-2006, 09:09 AM
"Go fvck yourself", Mary?

I guess the neocon lesbian fruit doesn't fall far from the asshole tree.

scaeagles
05-11-2006, 09:15 AM
"Go fvck yourself", Mary?

I guess the neocon lesbian fruit doesn't fall far from the asshole tree.

I guess I missed something.......to what does this refer?

SacTown Chronic
05-11-2006, 09:18 AM
Mary Cheney claims that during the debate when John Edwards brought up Cheney's lesbo daughter, she looked Edwards in the eye and mouthed her dad's infamous words at him.

Gemini Cricket
05-11-2006, 09:22 AM
Mary Cheney claims that during the debate when John Edwards brought up Cheney's lesbo daughter, she looked Edwards in the eye and mouthed her dad's infamous words at him.
Mary Cheney. What a complete and utter turd she is. Can't go up on stage with the rest of her family during the RNC, completely silent while this administration goes anti-marriage equality... Who the heck wants to read her book now? Complete sell out. When we're both put into the same concentration camp, I'm gonna totally hit her with my purse.

Scrooge McSam
05-11-2006, 09:23 AM
When we're both put into the same concentration camp, I'm gonna totally hit her with my purse.

You must spread some Mojo around before giving it to Gemini Cricket again.

wendybeth
05-11-2006, 09:26 AM
Lots of Russian immigrants over there? I did not know that. There was a small cluster around where I used to live in Kent, but I didn't notice any bias. Maybe I was just too busy patronizing the "european deli" and buying all of their chocolate bars. I can't remember which brand, but one of those bars was the best chocolate bar I've eaten in my life, and I've sampled plenty.

Yeah, we have a fairly large Russian population. The only problems I've heard of is with the Russian gangs stealing cars, but that's about it.

Alex
05-11-2006, 09:32 AM
There are a couple large Russians communities in Seattle (or at least there were a decade ago. I assume they're still there. And down in the Portland/Vancouver area their numbers swelled following the fall of the Soviet Union. By the end of the '90s my mom's employees were all almost entirely Russian immigrants.

In San Francisco about 200 out of the 1,500 people in my division at Wells Fargo were Russian immigrants (almost all worked in QA, there is a QA school in San Francisco that caters to Russians).

My experience is that most are legal, though, as the quota restrictions on Russians were pretty lax following the end of the cold war. I don't know if they've been tightened since.

Gemini Cricket
05-11-2006, 09:34 AM
There are a couple large Russians communities in Seattle...
Where do the smaller Russians live?
:D




I apologize, I'm in a silly mood. Aren't you glad you don't work in my office with me?

Alex
05-11-2006, 09:40 AM
There are no small Russians in the United States. Tha бабушки all get left at home.

JWBear
05-11-2006, 10:32 AM
For the record, I never said that opposing illegal immigration was racist. I said that implying all (or most) Hispanics are criminals is racist. Different issue.

scaeagles
05-11-2006, 10:34 AM
JW, I completely understand what you were saying. I'm irritated by people who think that opposition to illegal immigration is de facto racism.

JWBear
05-11-2006, 10:43 AM
JW, I completely understand what you were saying. I'm irritated by people who think that opposition to illegal immigration is de facto racism.
And I'm all for putting an end to illegal immigration. What angers me is those who seek to demonize, not only the illegals themselves, but legal immigrants and Hispanics in general. These are human beings who want a better life for themselves and their families, not monsters out to destroy our country.

scaeagles
05-11-2006, 10:53 AM
To an extent, I agree. However, there is a portion (how large I do not know) that believes that the Southwestern US actually belongs to Mexico.

As far as demonizing legal immigrants, the only place I see a blurring of the lines is by these protesters themselves. Most refuse to talk about the problem for what it is, being illegal immigration. Most always refer to it as an immigration protest, leaving the word illegal out of it.

This is not a debate about legal immigration. Protesters are trying to equate what is legal and what is not.

Motorboat Cruiser
05-11-2006, 11:30 AM
As far as demonizing legal immigrants, the only place I see a blurring of the lines is by these protesters themselves. Most refuse to talk about the problem for what it is, being illegal immigration. Most always refer to it as an immigration protest, leaving the word illegal out of it.

This is not a debate about legal immigration. Protesters are trying to equate what is legal and what is not.

Yes, it is this intentional blurring of the issue that drives me crazy. I always hear "Hey, we are all immigrants", and this is true for the most part. We are not all illegal immigrants though. We didn't all break the law to get here. My great-granparents waited in line at Ellis Island and followed the proper channels.

And that is the problem that I have. Becoming a legal immigrant is not an easy process. It is a slap in the face to the millions of people, including Mexicans, Canadians, Russians, etc. who had enough respect for our laws to go through the proper process to become citizens. I would not be happy at all if I waited literally years to become a citizen, only to find that that those who just walk over the border are not punished or deported. How is that fair?

scaeagles
05-11-2006, 11:35 AM
I'd give mojo if I could, MBC, so a loud and proud "AMEN, BROTHA!" is coming your way and will have to suffice.

Ghoulish Delight
05-11-2006, 11:42 AM
Of course, the blurring of the line goes both directions, and that's the objection to the "facts" that btd posted. It's a clear attempt to equate "Hispanics are criminals" to the illegal immigration issue.

Tangentially, the Equal Employment Opportunity Comission lists "Hispanic" as a race.

Gemini Cricket
05-11-2006, 11:49 AM
How is that fair?
I hear what you are saying. But we were weak in the past about enforcing the rules. How then can we suddenly get all up in arms about the people who got through? Well, how did they get through? Shoddy border security. You can have a tougher presence now and make it harder for people to get in illegally now. However, it's hard to say 'Okay, now that we're paying attention, everyone who we didn't see get in is a felon.' ???

Personally, I find someone who floated here on a raft to be pretty courageous. That's moxie. We should include those people who would do that to get here. My friend goes to Harvard. Her family floated here from Cuba when she was 6 or so on a freakin' raft. What are we supposed to say? 'Darling, you didn't fill out the right forms. You must take your raft and go back?' My friend is an undergrad at Harvard now. She's going to be a brilliant professor in biochemistry someday. Her family busts their butts to pay her tuition... They are legally American now, but initially they weren't. But they were so unhappy with their country that they came here to make a change and they did. To me, it's patrotic to say, 'If you would risk your life to be here, then you should be here.'

scaeagles
05-11-2006, 11:55 AM
Aren't Cubans automatically given legal status because it is assumed they need political assylum for escaping a communist country?

Gemini Cricket
05-11-2006, 11:56 AM
Aren't Cubans automatically given legal status because it is assumed they need political assylum for escaping a communist country?
I'm not sure. You're the brains around here...

:D

BarTopDancer
05-11-2006, 11:57 AM
My great-granparents waited in line at Ellis Island and followed the proper channels.

As did mine. And my mother went through the proper channels to come here from Canada. My Aunt, who has been here for close to 60 years was facing some immigration issues recently and there was concern she'd have to go back to Canada (she lived her entire adult life here. She has nothing and no one in Canada). Thankfully they were straightened out.

Alex
05-11-2006, 12:00 PM
Or perhaps it is just implying that illegal immigrants are criminals. If the numbers were to turn out to be true, would they be racist? Is it not possible to hold the opinion that illegal immigrants are more likely to engage in criminal activities without it being an indictment based on race? I think the poor and marginalized are more likely to be involved in criminal activities regardless of the race category of the poor marginalized people. It just so happens that in illegal immigrants tend to be poor and marginalized and tend to be overwhelmingly Latino.

I don't see that as racist.


Also the EEOC only considers "Hispanic" a race by first excluding from the meaning of "hispanic" all the non-Latino Hispanics. So, yes, by defining "hispanic" to mean "latino" then you do get closer to something like a "race." But since there are millions of Asian Hispanics the EEOC is using a non-standard meaning of the word.

The U.S. Census does not consider Hispanic a race which is why the EEOC has to provide detailed instructions (http://www.eeoc.gov/stats/census/race_ethnic_data.html) on how they convert an Ethnicity (Hispanic) into a race (Hispanic).

Alex
05-11-2006, 12:02 PM
I'm not sure. You're the brains around here...

scaeagles is right. Your friend never had illegal status. All Cubans who reach shore are automatically granted political sanctuary. That's what pisses off the Haitians so much.

Motorboat Cruiser
05-11-2006, 12:07 PM
I hear what you are saying. But we were weak in the past about enforcing the rules. How then can we suddenly get all up in arms about the people who got through? Well, how did they get through? Shoddy border security. You can have a tougher presence now and make it harder for people to get in illegally now. However, it's hard to say 'Okay, now that we're paying attention, everyone who we didn't see get in is a felon.' ???

Yes, we have been weak on this issue but if I rob someone and don't get caught, haven't I still committed a crime? If they find out about it years later, they surely aren't going to say "Well, we were a little lax when you committed the crime so, even though we now know you committed it, you are free to go". A crime was commited and there should be a penalty, even if the person isn't caught immediately.

Personally, I find someone who floated here on a raft to be pretty courageous. That's moxie. We should include those people who would do that to get here. My friend goes to Harvard. Her family floated here from Cuba when she was 6 or so on a freakin' raft. What are we supposed to say? 'Darling, you didn't fill out the right forms. You must take your raft and go back?' My friend is an undergrad at Harvard now. She's going to be a brilliant professor in biochemistry someday. Her family busts their butts to pay her tuition... They are legally American now, but initially they weren't. But they were so unhappy with their country that they came here to make a change and they did. To me, it's patrotic to say, 'If you would risk your life to be here, then you should be here.'

You know what? I see the courage in these acts as well, and I am well aware that these aren't necessarily bad people who are doing this. I sympathize with them and were I in the same situation, I very well might take the same course of action. I don't fault them, I fault the mexican government and I fault ours for letting this situation get so out of hand. Still, replace the kind family you mention above with a rapist and tell me it's no big deal that they didn't go through the proper channels (which might have prevented it). Most people that come into this country are good, hard working people. Some are absolutely not though and we have no way of determining whether a person who snuck across the border wants to work, or detonate a dirty bomb at Disneyland. The legal process can determine if someone that wants to move here has a prior record and they can be prevented. Illegally crossing the border means that we have no idea what your background is. That is a major problem.

Gemini Cricket
05-11-2006, 12:07 PM
scaeagles is right. Your friend never had illegal status. All Cubans who reach shore are automatically granted political sanctuary. That's what pisses off the Haitians so much.
Well that's cool! :)
I'm wondering why there would be such a distinction in the rules for people who come here from Cuba vs Mexico (and Haiti for that matter). I mean, we think Communism is wrong but we also think the way Mexico is run is wrong. We draw the line because one is a Communist country? (I'm being more inquisitive and not snarky here... in this post at least.)

Alex
05-11-2006, 12:13 PM
Essentially is a hangover from the Cold War. Nobody really supports it (or the embargo of Cuba) any longer but it can't be changed without appearing soft on Communism.

It is easy to oppose such measures against new countries, harder to actually stand up and say they should be abolished against existing dictators.

Vietnamese, Cambodians, and Laotians also had a period where, if they could get here, they were pretty much summarily granted asylum. East Europeans and Russians who managed to defect were also summarily granted asylum. The hook on which these asylum claims is made is that merely the act of trying to leave your home country is grounds for execution if you're returned.

If Vicente Fox started firing squads for any nationals returned by the United States then things might change.

Gemini Cricket
05-11-2006, 12:23 PM
Yes, we have been weak on this issue but if I rob someone and don't get caught, haven't I still committed a crime?
...
A crime was commited and there should be a penalty, even if the person isn't caught immediately.
Yes, but outside of being here illegally, don't these people also do us a lot of good? ie. These people are working the fields in Salinas. I don't see any kids right out of high school picking artichokes...
I don't put illegal aliens and thieves and rapists in the same boat. I don't think it's a black and white issue like that. I think some good comes from them being here.
Still, replace the kind family you mention above with a rapist and tell me it's no big deal that they didn't go through the proper channels (which might have prevented it). Most people that come into this country are good, hard working people. Some are absolutely not though and we have no way of determining whether a person who snuck across the border wants to work, or detonate a dirty bomb at Disneyland. The legal process can determine if someone that wants to move here has a prior record and they can be prevented. Illegally crossing the border means that we have no idea what your background is. That is a major problem.
I don't see what you're saying here. Someone who comes here legally could rape someone. Someone who was born here could do the same. The legal processes fail us all the time. Your statement, MBC, illustrates to me that the fear tactics that have been used about this issue are working.

The real issue at hand is that Americans are in this weird space right now where people are rising up in fear of people who are different. Post 9/11, America is a tough place to be if you're Muslim, Jewish, black, Latino, gay... Everything is a threat to our country or a threat to our moral fiber. Well, are those things really a threat to us? ie. People have been coming over illegally for many many decades now. Have we crumbled? People need to have more faith in their country's ability to survive than that. If every person who comes here illegally has the potential to topple us, then something's wrong with us (the U.S.).

Gemini Cricket
05-11-2006, 12:25 PM
If Vicente Fox started firing squads for any nationals returned by the United States then things might change.
Well, let's hope he doesn't...


I just thought of another thing to add to my post above. During WWII, we put Japanese Americans into camps. Did that make us any safer? No. Was it a knee jerk reaction to Pearl Harbor? Yes. Did people feel safer after we did that? Probably. Was it right of us to do? Absolutely not.

scaeagles
05-11-2006, 12:30 PM
Yes, but outside of being here illegally, don't these people also do us a lot of good?

I guess it depends on your definition of good.

Here is something I found and hate to admit it's from FAIR:

"Between 40 and 50 percent of wage-loss among low-skilled Americans is due
to the in-migration of low-skilled workers. Many American workers lose their
jobs through unfair competition. An estimated 1,880,000 American workers are
displaced from their jobs every year by immigration and the cost for
providing welfare and assistance to these Americans is over $15 billion a
year - FAIR research.

Immigration is a net drain on the economy; corporate interests reap the
benefits of cheap labor, while taxpayers pay the infrastructural cost. FAIR
research shows "the net annual cost of illegal immigration has been estimated
at between $67 and $87 billion a year. Even studies claiming some modest
overall gain for the economy from immigration ($1 to $10 billion a year) have
found that it is outweighed by the fiscal cost ($15 to $20 billion a year)
to native taxpayers."

In AZ Cesar Chavez is big. He was the man who organized farm labor. He was adamantly opposed to illegal immigration because illegals flooded the work market and drove wages down. He reported anyone of questionable status he found to INS.

Motorboat Cruiser
05-11-2006, 12:31 PM
I don't see what you're saying here. Someone who comes here legally could rape someone. Someone who was born here could do the same. The legal processes fail us all the time. Your statement, MBC, illustrates to me that the fear tactics that have been used about this issue are working.


Sure, someone who comes here legally could rape someone. If they have no prior record, we would have no way of knowing that. But some (maybe only a few) of the people who sneak over here DO have a previous history of crime that might raise a red flag. Without them going through the proper channels, we have absolutely no way of knowing this.

If it is ok for a company in the US to require a background check before someone can work for them, it should also be ok to require a background check before we allow someone to become a citizen. That's not fear. That is common sense.

Alex
05-11-2006, 12:36 PM
Yes, but outside of being here illegally, don't these people also do us a lot of good? ie. These people are working the fields in Salinas. I don't see any kids right out of high school picking artichokes...

But if they weren't here you would. Or you'd see machines picking the artichokes. If there wasn't a large supply of people willing to work under the table for very low wages either the farmers would pay more to attract workers (and we'd pay more for artichokes) or the farmers would find ways to pick the artichokes with the labor available (through efficiencies and automation).

So, instead of "these people are working the jobs that Americans don't want" maybe it is "these people are supressing wages to the point that they become jobs Americans don't want." Is it really amazing that in parts of the country without a large number of illegal immigrant these jobs that "no American wants" still get done. Why is it mildly shocking to eat in a restaurant in Minnesota and see the tables bussed by white people?

The issue of the people who have been in this country illegally for a long time is the part that really screws up this debate. I think most people agree that strong border enforcement is a reasonable governmental function. What do we do with the people already here? Is it fair to deport a 22 year old who came to the country with her parents when she was 3 and has known no other home? No, not really. But is it fair to give her citizenship and jump her ahead of the millions of people trying to do it through proper channels? No, not really.

I don't really have a problem with amnesty of those already here. Not as a general concept. The problem is that it creates an incentive for people to come here illegally in increasing numbers. All they have to do is get here and hide long enough and eventually they'll be made legal. It happened in the aftermath of the last amnesty and reports are that illegal crossings are up since the recent talk of new amnesty has begun. There isn't an easy answer and no matter what policy is enacted it is going to be unfair to a large number of people.

Motorboat Cruiser
05-11-2006, 12:37 PM
Well, let's hope he doesn't...


During WWII, we put Japanese Americans into camps. Did that make us any safer? No. Was it a knee jerk reaction to Pearl Harbor? Yes. Did people feel safer after we did that? Probably. Was it right of us to do? Absolutely not.

The reason why it was wrong to do was because these people had not broken any laws and were here legally. During the war, would it have been wise to let a million Japanese cross our border without any checking whatsoever? Would we have been wrong not to do so?

Gemini Cricket
05-11-2006, 12:38 PM
I guess it depends on your definition of good.
I lived in Monterey, CA for 3 years or so. My commute took me through a artichoke field every day. Anytime there was something to harvest, there were illegal immigrants out there picking these crops. I'm thinking that these guys did the markets some good by picking these crops. No one else would do it. I think they're doing a good thing.

(Tangent: In fact, I spoke with a school teacher in Carmel about this. I told her that if I were running her school, I'd make it a requirement for the kids to do one day of labor in one of these fields to see how hard it actually is. She thought it was a good idea.)

Yes, they take the job of someone American and legal who could do it. But I find it hard to believe that there are stacks of applications that were overlooked at the foreman's desk. If these guys didn't pick these crops, the business would take itself to South America and veggies would have to be shipped over here. I think that's worse for our country.

Alex
05-11-2006, 12:40 PM
I just thought of another thing to add to my post above. During WWII, we put Japanese Americans into camps. Did that make us any safer? No. Was it a knee jerk reaction to Pearl Harbor? Yes. Did people feel safer after we did that? Probably. Was it right of us to do? Absolutely not.

Can you continue on this thought to help explain its relevance to the illegal immigration debate? Not being snarky, just not getting what you mean.

I think it would have been completely appropriate to view illegal Japanese immigration as a threat during WWII. I don't see anybody advocating any kind of poor treatment for legal immigrants in the current debate.

BarTopDancer
05-11-2006, 12:42 PM
I haven't really spoken a lot about this topic here. I'm going to divulge a bit further in to my thoughts on this.

If someone snuck across the border, got a job (whatever job it is as long as it's legal), is supporting him/herself, and their family (if they have one) and not sucking the life out of our social programs (welfare, food stamps, wic) then I don't have a huge problem with them being here. Yes, they are illegal, yes, they should have gone through the proper channels, but at this stage in the situation they are making a living, support themselves, being productive and probably doing work that no one who is here legally would want to do anyways. They may not be paying taxes but they are making an effort to truly make a better life for themselves.

If someone snuck across the border, is not making any effort to support him/herself, and their family (if they have one) and has signed up for our social programs (welfare, food stamps, wic) then they need to leave. They are not contributing to our tax dollars and are taking advantage of our programs.

These opnions go for anyone who is here illegally. Our social programs are strained enough without people who are here illegally taking advantage of them.

Gemini Cricket
05-11-2006, 12:42 PM
But some (maybe only a few) of the people who sneak over here DO have a previous history of crime that might raise a red flag. Without them going through the proper channels, we have absolutely no way of knowing this.
Am I really going to trust border security to properly screen someone when they can't even keep people out?
If it is ok for a company in the US to require a background check before someone can work for them, it should also be ok to require a background check before we allow someone to become a citizen. That's not fear. That is common sense.
The sudden emphasis on this now is fear. Common sense should have been used for decades now and wasn't.

scaeagles
05-11-2006, 12:44 PM
As Alex pointed out, innovation and invention can take the place of field workers when economically feasable.

I wish I could remember the details of this.....about 40 years ago there was a strike in California of tomato pickers. At that point in time no one had yet developed a machine that could pick them and it was not practical to spend the money to do so. During a threatened strike by tomato pickers, a farmer worked with existing fruit picking machines and developed one that could pick tomatos without crushing them.

Since the labor was going to cost more, the machine was developed, and there was no longer a need for tomato pickers.

I would suspect that automation is possible for a lot of these job when wage demands escalate.

Alex
05-11-2006, 12:45 PM
(Tangent: In fact, I spoke with a school teacher in Carmel about this. I told her that if I were running her school, I'd make it a requirement for the kids to do one day of labor in one of these fields to see how hard it actually is. She thought it was a good idea.)

Yes, they take the job of someone American and legal who could do it. But I find it hard to believe that there are stacks of applications that were overlooked at the foreman's desk. If these guys didn't pick these crops, the business would take itself to South America and veggies would have to be shipped over here. I think that's worse for our country.
Growing up in Southwest Washington strawberries were the big crop and they came to harvest just as school got out for the summer. Pretty much every kid I knew put in time at the fields getting their $.50 per flat and finding out just how hard the work was. I think I was 13 the first time my mom woke me up at 6 a.m. and dragged me out the strawberry fields.

GC, at what point do you think our minimum wage laws, workplace protection laws, and employee right laws should be discarded to prevent an industry from leaving the country? Where we will then protest the corporations use of underpaid foreign labor without the basic protections we grant in the United States? And did you ever think you'd end up on the same side of an issue as evil corporations?

Gemini Cricket
05-11-2006, 12:58 PM
But if they weren't here you would.
Not necessarily. These businesses would just do what Wal*Mart is doing. Go to where they can find cheap labor.
I don't really have a problem with amnesty of those already here. Not as a general concept.
I think if it is made clear that this is amnesty for people here already, but after a certain time they could be held as felons would be ideal. However, how do you prove who got here when? That's the tough part.. I think it won't be seen as an incentive if the rules are strictly enforced after that.

Alex
05-11-2006, 01:05 PM
Maybe you wouldn't see wage increases or automation and the industry would move elsewhere. But so? I don't see how low-wage unprotected workers is worth the tradeoff for cheaper local artichokes.

The point you raise about amnesty is one that a lot of people raise. And that is why they want to see an period of strong enforcement before amnesty is discussed. When Reagan did his big amnesty back in the '80s the promise was the it would mark a new age of strict border enforcement. Obviously that didn't happen and a lot of people came in (post amnesty illegal immigration is much higher than pre-amnesty) hoping for another amnesty at some point down the road. That amnesty was also supposed to be one-time thing for the ones already here.

Obviously, since we're discussing it again, "one time thing" is hard to enforce on the future.

Scrooge McSam
05-11-2006, 01:05 PM
"these people are supressing wages to the point that they become jobs Americans don't want."

I agree with the points you've made here. But I am not seeing the whole story get discussed

I hope you reserve as much criticism for the businessmen who hire "these people", in violation of our laws, as you do for the illegal immigrants themselves.

I think you probably do, but that doesn't seem to get discussed NEARLY as much.

Motorboat Cruiser
05-11-2006, 01:05 PM
Am I really going to trust border security to properly screen someone when they can't even keep people out?

Part of what needs to be fixed is more funding and more agents. The system is obviously completely overwhelmed at the moment and has been for some time. But that isn't really the issue here. The issue is, should we just allow anyone into this country with no safeguards whatsoever? Why even have a legal process if there is no penalty whatsoever for sidestepping that process?

The sudden emphasis on this now is fear. Common sense should have been used for decades now and wasn't.

The only "sudden" part of this is that politicians are now seeing that people are pissed off about this and the media sees a story that people are interested in. But this didn't become important to me because CNN started covering it. It has been one of my many gripes with this and former administrations for a long time. You are absolutely right, things should have never come to this point. We should have been taking this seriously for a long time and we didn't and we are paying a price now.

If there are fear tactics being used, they are the "nobody would ever do these jobs but illegal immigrants." There is no truth to that statement. An accurate statement would be "nobody is willing to do this work at the wage being offerred to illegal immigrants." Offer someone 10 bucks an hour to do this work and you would see that pile of applications materialize in a heartbeat.

Years ago, when I lived on Long Island, we had two family friends that were both landscapers. They supported their family by doing this and they did the work themselves. I'm sure that they were paid more than $4 an hour but they had plenty of work and didn't go out of business. People were willing to pay whatever they charged or they didn't use their services. I'm having a hard time understanding why it worked then but could never possibly work now.

Gemini Cricket
05-11-2006, 01:08 PM
Growing up in Southwest Washington strawberries were the big crop and they came to harvest just as school got out for the summer. Pretty much every kid I knew put in time at the fields getting their $.50 per flat and finding out just how hard the work was. I think I was 13 the first time my mom woke me up at 6 a.m. and dragged me out the strawberry fields.
I think that's cool.
GC, at what point do you think our minimum wage laws, workplace protection laws, and employee right laws should be discarded to prevent an industry from leaving the country? Where we will then protest the corporations use of underpaid foreign labor without the basic protections we grant in the United States? And did you ever think you'd end up on the same side of an issue as evil corporations?
I don't think those things should be compromised to prevent someone from leaving. I think it would be up to the consumer to see if they'd put up with that kind of thing. They don't seem to mind going to Wal*Mart to buy their cheap clothes and lawn furniture, they probably wouldn't mind if Earthbound Farms moved their crops to South America...
I don't know if I'm on the side of big corporations. But I do see your point. I keep thinking that these people have to work somewhere. Ideally, if they got here the right way things would be perfect. However, we enabled them to be here by being shoddy with our border security. So what happens next? They work nowhere and starve. Then you'd have the thieves and rapists. There needs to be some inbetween place for these people. There isn't.

Alex
05-11-2006, 01:09 PM
I hope you reserve as much criticism for the businessmen who hire "these people", in violation of our laws, as you do for the illegal immigrants themselves.

I reserve more criticism for the employers than for the illegal immigrants. I understand why the illegal immigrants are here and didn't wait in line to do things properly. There is an underlying nobility in motive for why most of them do it.

Penalties for employers should be swift and severe. I'll be happy to talk about that too, but this has been about what to do with the people already here and the people crossing over.

Ghoulish Delight
05-11-2006, 01:09 PM
I wonder, how would turning illegal immigration into a felony hold up to ex post facto scrutiny?

Motorboat Cruiser
05-11-2006, 01:12 PM
I reserve more criticism for the employers than for the illegal immigrants. I understand why the illegal immigrants are here and didn't wait in line to do things properly. There is an underlying nobility in motive for why most of them do it.

Penalties for employers should be swift and severe. I'll be happy to talk about that too, but this has been about what to do with the people already here and the people crossing over.

I agree with all of this as well. Certainly, the demand is the main issue. Make strictly enforced penalties for the corporations that hire illegals and it will go a long way towards fixing this problem.

Gemini Cricket
05-11-2006, 01:12 PM
I don't see how low-wage unprotected workers is worth the tradeoff for cheaper local artichokes.
Believe it or not, I didn't see cheap artichokes in Monterey. They're the same price here. The only way to get cheap prices is to go to a veggie stand somewhere by Moss Landing or something. The Ralph's artichokes were just as expensive as here.
Obviously, since we're discussing it again, "one time thing" is hard to enforce on the future.
I think the problem is when to start it and how. I think giving people a deadline to become citizens or else is an idea, but it seems brutal. I mean, deporting people by the truckloads is scary to me.

Alex
05-11-2006, 01:14 PM
I would think it would hold up pretty well. "Illegal Immigration" is an ongoing criminal act. It isn't something you did once in the past and that's it. I would think this also precludes statute of limitation type arguments as well.

Scrooge McSam
05-11-2006, 01:17 PM
I'll be happy to talk about that too, but this has been about what to do with the people already here and the people crossing over.

No, the discussion is good and I don't want to derail it.

Just call it a pet peeve of mine. So many times I see the immigrants roundly criticized and the lawlessness of the employers ignored.

Gemini Cricket
05-11-2006, 01:17 PM
Part of what needs to be fixed is more funding and more agents. The system is obviously completely overwhelmed at the moment and has been for some time. But that isn't really the issue here. The issue is, should we just allow anyone into this country with no safeguards whatsoever? Why even have a legal process if there is no penalty whatsoever for sidestepping that process?
We haven't had huge penalties in the past. It's a little late to start it now. Especially when people have been here for ages. I mean, some people are here and don't know of any other place that is home. Kids that come here when they're small, grow up here and are illegal. What are you supposed to do, kick out someone to Mexico when all they know about life is in Southern California? That doesn't seem fair either.

Saying that you want this to happen because of accountability is different from saying you want this to happen because one of these people might be a terrorist.

The only "sudden" part of this is that politicians are now seeing that people are pissed off about this and the media sees a story that people are interested in.
But why is there a focus on it? Fear.
"nobody is willing to do this work at the wage being offerred to illegal immigrants."
I see your point on this.

Motorboat Cruiser
05-11-2006, 01:18 PM
I think giving people a deadline to become citizens or else is an idea, but it seems brutal. I mean, deporting people by the truckloads is scary to me.

But, isn't the idea that many health care facilities are closing because they are completely overwhelmed by illegal immigrants also scary? What about the strains on the educational system when schools are so strained by the influx of illegals that they can't provide an education to those who have a legal right to be there? Ask any teacher in southern Ca. if illegals are hurting their ability to teach and you will get a resounding yes. These teachers are on the front line and I believe what the ones I know have told me.

Gemini Cricket
05-11-2006, 01:21 PM
I would think it would hold up pretty well. "Illegal Immigration" is an ongoing criminal act. It isn't something you did once in the past and that's it. I would think this also precludes statute of limitation type arguments as well.
It's a criminal act that nobody focused on for awhile. Now that we realize it's a problem and it's a little too late.

But again, I don't see our nation crumbling because of the illegal immigration problem. And I just drove across country, there's a lot of land for these people so saying there isn't room isn't correct either.

I think corporations should pay people more to pick crops. They should give them the benefits and retirement opportunities that they deserve. They should be accountable for hiring illegal aliens. But what happens to these illegal workers once the work is gone for them? They go nowhere.

Gemini Cricket
05-11-2006, 01:28 PM
But, isn't the idea that many health care facilities are closing because they are completely overwhelmed by illegal immigrants also scary?
These facilities should be further funded by our government. It's the government's fault that they are here. The concern for these people should be there now, because the concern wasn't there while they were crossing.
What about the strains on the educational system when schools are so strained by the influx of illegals that they can't provide an education to those who have a legal right to be there? Ask any teacher in southern Ca. if illegals are hurting their ability to teach and you will get a resounding yes. These teachers are on the front line and I believe what the ones I know have told me.
Health care, poor education, our country's security... are the illegal aliens to blame for all of these things? Maybe in part, but not totally. Our health care system sucks, our schools suck, if illegal aliens are our explanation for all of these things then that explanation is a cop out.

Our government and our leaders didn't want to focus on affordable health care, they didn't want to focus on education, they didn't want to spend the money on border control and security... Now it's biting them in the butt. They don't pay attention to things until it's too late. Now they have a huge problem to fix. So what's the answer? I don't know. All I know is that I can very easily put myself in an illegal alien's shoes. If I were an illegal alien, I would want someone like a Gemini Cricket to have a little bit of sympathy for my plight.

Gemini Cricket
05-11-2006, 01:29 PM
I wonder, how would turning illegal immigration into a felony hold up to ex post facto scrutiny?
I don't know what ex post facto scrutiny is, but when I find out, I'll respond.
:)

Alex
05-11-2006, 01:32 PM
I don't think illegal immigrants will topple the United States. But that doesn't mean I don't think it is an issue to be addressed. A lot of people have been focusing on it for a very long time, I don't see their efforts as invalid just because it took a decade to get press attention.

If I use a flimsy lock on my garage and some teenager moves in there, at what point am I obligated to call him son?

And I too have driven across the United States many times. I suppose we could ship all of the illegal immigrants to Wyoming but what exactly would they do there? There's a reason they mostly end up in our big cities. Saying that they don't cause a crowding problem in LA because there is a lot of room in North Dakota isn't addressing the issue.

Motorboat Cruiser
05-11-2006, 01:34 PM
But what happens to these illegal workers once the work is gone for them? They go nowhere.

This is a situation that I am faced with regularly. I own my own business and over the last couple of years have seen many of my clients turn to China to get the work done that I used to do. I have contemplated closing down many times because the work that was once plentiful is now practically non-existant. And if that happens, I am on my own. It is my responsibility to come up with a back-up plan and if I don't, I'm screwed. Life isn't always fair.

I feel very bad for these poor people but if by fixing the system, they have to find another way to support themselves, then that is what they have to do. There are no easy solutions to any of this. All we can do is try to determine what is best for our country. And no matter how I try to wrap my brain around it, allowing 12 million people to overwhelm our social services, with no repercussions whatsoever for breaking the law is not the solution.

scaeagles
05-11-2006, 01:41 PM
I don't think ex post facto is a problem here. If the crime was only crossing the border illegally, then you couldn't change that one act to a felony. They have already committed it, it is a misdemeanor, and it can't be changed to a felony. However, residing in the country illegally is ongoing. So while living here illegally yesterday may not have been a felony, there is no reason why living here illegally tomorrow can not be one regardless of when someone came in.

Alex
05-11-2006, 01:45 PM
Oh, well I feel bad for their plight. I understand their life is hard and frequently unpleasant.

I also feel that way about the local homeless guy but I'm still going to kick him out of my garage (if I had one) if he tries to move in. I'm even going to kick him out if it turns out he's been living there for a while and it was all my fault for using a flimsy lock on the door.

Motorboat Cruiser
05-11-2006, 01:47 PM
Health care, poor education, our country's security... are the illegal aliens to blame for all of these things? Maybe in part, but not totally. Our health care system sucks, our schools suck, if illegal aliens are our explanation for all of these things then that explanation is a cop out.

I never said they were the sole explanation. I know you know me better than that. Still, the burden that illegal immigration causes is real and it increases daily. It cannot be overlooked.

All I know is that I can very easily put myself in an illegal alien's shoes. If I were an illegal alien, I would want someone like a Gemini Cricket to have a little bit of sympathy for my plight.

Which implies that I don't have sympathy. To be fair, I don't think you are really suggesting that but the fact is, I can very easily put myself in their shoes. Like I've said repeatedly, I don't blame them. I completely understand why they do what they do and I feel very sorry that they are in the position they are in due the fact that they live in an amazingly corrupt country that frankly doesn't give a damn about them.

But the United States cannot afford to fix every problem that is created by another country. The best we can do is allow a process for those who want to come into our country legally have a way to do so. We have always done this and I suspect, always will. The problem is that our government has been doing what is best for the corporations and not what is best for its citizenry. Both political parties are beholden to the corporations and that is why this problem is as bad as it is.

Not Afraid
05-11-2006, 01:51 PM
I'm really trying to put myself in the shoes of the immigrant but am having a difficult time with it because, a) my family immigrated a LONG time ago and b) my inlaws immigrated post WW2 from Deutscland when things were just a bit different. I wish I knew more about what my inlaws went through. I know there was a bit of flying by the seat of their pants and they went to Canada first before coming to the US. But, both became citizens and a part of the human economy.

The other illegals I have personally know are my Mexican BIL and a friend who is Irish and a chef for Patina trying to stay in the US on an expired green card. I don't begrudge either one of them for wanting to live here. But, both contribute to out economy in varying degrees. I guess that's what becomes the division for me - contribute or leave.

Anyways, I'm babbling about something I know very little about. blah blah blah.

Nephythys
05-11-2006, 01:54 PM
Thanks Alex. I'd love to send back URBAN LEGEND to the person who sent it to me. This guy is *righter* than Nephy and Sca (not insulting either of you, just trying to describe him). Sometimes I'd like to send him here and watch him start debating Alex and iSm. That would be fun.


heh-no worries. I'm on the right on some things- left on others, and middle on some. So no offense taken-

(though I am to the RIGHT of GWB on many things ;) )

SacTown Chronic
05-11-2006, 01:56 PM
I hope you reserve as much criticism for the businessmen who hire "these people", in violation of our laws, as you do for the illegal immigrants themselves.
It does seem that many Americans forget that these illegals are here by corporate invitation, doesn't it?

JWBear
05-11-2006, 02:05 PM
But, isn't the idea that many health care facilities are closing because they are completely overwhelmed by illegal immigrants also scary?
That's a myth.

I was just recently doing some research on this as it affects LA County, but I don't have the data here at work. I'll post the actual numbers (and their sources) tonight when I get home, but here is what I remember of the top of my head:

About 2 million uninsured persons in LA County (out of a population of 10 million).

There are aproximately 800,000 illegal aliens in LA County, of these, about 50,000 are on Medi-Cal (receiving emergancy room and pregnancy related services only).

So, out of the 2 million uninsured in LA county, only about 750,000 - or 37.5% - are illegal. And that is assuming that none of those 750,000 have some other type of coverage.

So, are we going to persecute the 1.25 million legal aliens and citizens who are uninsured and clogging-up the health care system, as well?

Alex
05-11-2006, 02:09 PM
Um, how does what you said contradict what what you quoted?

scaeagles
05-11-2006, 02:09 PM
Decrease it by the 37.5% and I bet they aren't as overwhelmed.

The legal aliens and citizens are breaking no laws by accessing those services. Those who are here illegally are breaking laws to access those services. Big difference.

If I am having dinner with my family of five and two uninvited people come in (an increase of 40%, so close to what you've posted), they may not be eating as much as my family as a whole, but it sure puts a drain on the food budget.

JWBear
05-11-2006, 02:13 PM
Um, how does what you said contradict what what you quoted?
That illegals aren't the boggeyman. You can't blame all of society's woes in illegals. You might as well claim that the high gas prices are the fault of the illegals. Or earthquakes, or sunspots.

JWBear
05-11-2006, 02:15 PM
Decrease it by the 37.5% and I bet they aren't as overwhelmed.

The legal aliens and citizens are breaking no laws by accessing those services. Those who are here illegally are breaking laws to access those services. Big difference.

If I am having dinner with my family of five and two uninvited people come in (an increase of 40%, so close to what you've posted), they may not be eating as much as my family as a whole, but it sure puts a drain on the food budget.
No, it's more like you have 7 uninvited guests, but you only like 5 of them, so you blame running out of food on just the 2 you don't like and ignore the 5 you do.

scaeagles
05-11-2006, 02:17 PM
Not blaming illegals for all of society's woes does not change the fact that illegals due contribute to the woes of our society when in fact they should not be a part of our society.

scaeagles
05-11-2006, 02:18 PM
No, it's more like you have 7 uninvited guests, but you only like 5 of them, so you blame running out of food on just the 2 you don't like and ignore the 5 you do.

That is the most ridiculous thing I've ever read in my life. Seriously.

Gemini Cricket
05-11-2006, 02:29 PM
Which implies that I don't have sympathy. To be fair, I don't think you are really suggesting that but the fact is, I can very easily put myself in their shoes.
I'd like to clarify that I didn't mean you. At all.
:)

Prudence
05-11-2006, 02:29 PM
No, it's more like you have 7 uninvited guests, but you only like 5 of them, so you blame running out of food on just the 2 you don't like and ignore the 5 you do.

If I have 7 uninvited guests it doesn't matter how many of them I like. They all have to get out because I'm not running a *&!!$^# restaurant.

scaeagles
05-11-2006, 02:30 PM
I bet you meant me. You hate me, don't you? You think I'm right wing scum.:)

JWBear
05-11-2006, 02:33 PM
Not blaming illegals for all of society's woes does not change the fact that illegals due contribute to the woes of our society when in fact they should not be a part of our society.
My point, which everyone either doesn't get, or chooses to ignore, is that people are demonizing illegal aliens, making them scapegoats for all of society's problems. Illegals are not to blame for all of our problems. Things are never that simplistic.

Honestly, I don't think I can go on debating this subject. Whenever I do, I get so angry and frustrated. People are making monsters out of these people. What's next? Concentration camps? History has told us that the next step after de-humanizing a people is genocide.

I just can't understand the hate, veiled and blatant, that I see in society right now; hate directed towards illegal aliens, legal aliens, and Hispanics alike. These are human beings we're talking about!

Motorboat Cruiser
05-11-2006, 02:33 PM
I appreciate the clarification, GC. :)

To add some more fuel to the debate fire, I came across this...

Camarota, Steven A. 2004. "The High Cost of Cheap Labor: Illegal Immigration and the Federal Budget." Washington, DC: Center for Immigration Studies. URL: http://www.cis.org/articles/2004/fiscal.pdf

Background: Study is designed to assess the economic impact of illegal immigration on the federal budget.

Data Source: The Census Bureau for the year 2002.

Findings: The federal government provided $26.3 billion in federal services to households headed by undocumented immigrants ("illegal aliens") in 2002, but only collected $16 billion in taxes from undocumented households. The most utilized services include: "Medicaid ($2.5 billion); treatment for the uninsured ($2.2 billion); food assistance programs such as food stamps, WIC, and free school lunches ($1.9 billion); the federal prison and court systems ($1.6 billion); and federal aid to schools ($1.4 billion)" (pg. 5). Undocumented immigrants impact the federal budget due to their low education levels and low incomes (not their excessive use of federal services) and the costs associated with their U.S. born children (who are eligible to enroll in federal programs).

scaeagles
05-11-2006, 02:36 PM
Actually, if you reread this thread, you'll see that people who hire illegals, the corrupt Mexican government, and our own government for a lack of border control, are at the top of the list with the illegals themselves coming in after that.

It isn't an issue of hate. I don't get why you don't see that.

Gemini Cricket
05-11-2006, 02:39 PM
I bet you meant me. You hate me, don't you? You think I'm right wing scum.:)
No, I barely think about you at all. :D

I'm joking. I don't think you're scum and I don't hate anyone. You know that. Although, I think I hate that girl that won that lifetime pass to all the Disney parks...

I didn't mean anyone was being insensitive. I was feeling like people don't think about how crappy it would be to be working hard in those fields and then to come home and hear that people want to classify you as a felon.

Once I took a shuttle from Monterey to San Francisco. The shuttle was filled with people. This lady next to me looked out into a field filled with workers from the shuttle window and said to her husband, 'Oh look at that. Just like a Steinbeck book. People working the fields. How romantic.' I just about crapped myself. I thought, 'Romantic? Lady, do you have any idea what it's like doing what they're doing?' I of course bit my tongue. How I wished I could have grabbed that Filet-o-Fish out of her hands and pushed her into an artichoke field and made her pick veggies for a day.